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The Patterns of Party Polarization in East Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 March 2016

Abstract

The alignment of parties within a party system shapes the nature of electoral competition, the process of representation, and potentially the legitimacy of the system. This article describes the distribution of parties and the levels of party polarization in the party systems of East Asian democracies. We examine the public's perceptions of party positions on a left-right scale to map the pattern of party competition. The evidence is based on two waves of surveys from the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems. We describe considerable variation in the polarization of Asian party systems, which has direct implications for the clarity of party choice and the behavior of voters. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of our findings.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © East Asia Institute 

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References

Notes

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22. Additional information on the CSES surveys, fieldwork, and questionnaires is available from the project website (www.cses.org). Both CSES modules include Thailand, but the Thai survey did not include the left-right scale.Google Scholar

23. See McAllister, Ian, Political Behaviour (Melbourne: Longman Cheshire, 1992).Google Scholar

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25. However, in the World Values Survey, 97 percent of the Taiwanese respondents positioned themselves on the left-right scale.Google Scholar

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27. See the regional comparisons in Dalton, , “Social Modernization.” Google Scholar

28. The percentage of the public able to locate two major parties is as follows: Australia, Liberals (83 percent) and Labour (80 percent); New Zealand, Labour (82 percent) and National (80 percent); Japan, LDP (85 percent) and JCP (80 percent); Korea, GNP (93 percent) and UD (90 percent); Philippines, Lakas (83 percent) and NPC (81 percent); Taiwan, DPP (49 percent) and KMT (49 percent).Google Scholar

29. In part, this reflects the unusually personalist nature of Korean party politics. The progressive, democratic reformer Kim Dae-jung ran for the presidency in 1998 as the head of a centrist/conservative coalition.Google Scholar

30. Rood, , “Elections as Complicated and Important Events.” Google Scholar

31. For instance, in the 2001 World Values Survey, the Philippine left-right mean is 6.44, which is between the CSES mean of 7.16 in 1998 and 6.01 in 2004.Google Scholar

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33. For example, Sartori, , Parties and Party Systems; Powell, , Contemporary Democracies. Google Scholar

34. Dalton, , “The Quantity and the Quality of Party Systems.” Google Scholar

35. We thank Rein Taagepera for his assistance in developing these statistics. The polarization index is measured as P = Σ (party vote share i )* (party L-R score i – party system average L-R score/5)2 (where i represents individual parties). This P index has a value of 0 when all parties occupy the same position on the left-right scale, and 10 when all the parties are located at either 0 or 10 on the scale. The representation index is measured as R = Σ (governing party L-R score – voter L-R score i )/n (where i represents individual voters). The representation gap is measured as the absolute difference between the average voter and the perceived position of the governing party. The governing party is defined as the party of the prime minister.Google Scholar

36. These cross-national comparisons are based on a different set of nations in both timepoints, and thus changes over time may reflect a different mix of nations. There were fourteen Western democracies (Western Europe and North America) in module I and seventeen in module II. There were seven Eastern European nations in module I and four in module II. For additional analyses, see Dalton, , “The Quantity and the Quality of Party Systems.” Google Scholar

37. Ibid. Google Scholar

38. Ibid. Google Scholar