The Immigration Issue and Anti-Immigrant Party Success: Is Sweden the Odd Case Out?
Abstract
The handling of the immigration issue by established parties and the electoral success
of anti-immigrant parties are closely linked. Comparative research on anti-immigrant
parties argues that articulation of the immigration issue by established parties help
make anti-immigrant parties electorally viable. The Swedish case seems to challenge
this view. While there is no successful anti-immigrant party, scholars claim that the
immigration issue has been a salient issue for established parties at least since the mid
1990s. However, contradicting this claim, this paper argues that Swedish established
parties have chosen to not articulate the immigration issue. It first demonstrates
empirically that the immigration issue has indeed an electoral potential in Sweden.
Using primary data on election manifestos and televised party leader debates from
1970 to 2006, it then shows that established parties have downplayed the immigration
issue in their vote-seeking activities.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350724_2009_30_dahlstrom_esaiasson.pdf
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Date
2009-12Author
Dahlström, Carl
Esaiasson, Peter
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2009:30
Language
eng