Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
This article summarizes the cartel model of party structure and tests it against the experience of the Canadian party system in the 1990s. Four claims are evaluated: that the three dominant parties in the House of Commons before 1993 colluded to exclude new parties; that they used state subsidies in their own interest; that the 1993 election result was a backlash against the cartel parties; and that Canadian parties are adopting new leadership selection methods in order to allow their leaders greater autonomy. The article concludes that the first two claims are valid while the latter two are not, and discusses some of the implications of these findings for Canadian parties and for the cartel model itself.
Après avoir fait le bilan du modèle du cartel dans la littérature sur la structure des partis politiques, on cherche ici à l'évaluer dans le contexte canadien. Les propositions suivantes sont scrutées à la loupe: les trois partis représentés à la Chambre des Communes avant 1993 se sont entendus pour exclure toute nouvelle formation; ils ont utilisé des deniers publics à des fins particulières; l'élection de 1993 a révélé l'ampleur du mécontentement populaire; les partis canadiens adoptent désormais de nouvelles méthodes de sélection de leurs chefs pour les rendre plus autonomes. Les conclusions de l'auteure portent tant sur le système des partis politiques au Canada que sur le modèle du cartel.
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