Scandal Fatigue: Scandal Elections and Satisfaction with Democracy in Western Europe 1977-2007
Abstract
We combine Eurobarometer surveys with contextual data from 19 countries and three
decades, and find that elections are increasingly associated with major scandals. In the
late 1970s few elections were associated with major scandals whereas today 40-50
percent are. Further, looking at the entire period, both recent and past scandal
elections have had long-term negative (rather than positive) net effects on satisfaction
with democracy. However, as scandals have become more common—at different
rates in different countries—the once negative net effect has withered away. This
“scandal fatigue syndrome” appears driven both by changes in the composition of
scandal elections (multi-actor scandal elections still have negative effects but have not
become more common), as well as by larger heterogeneity in effects (single-actor
scandal elections used to be inconsequential but gradually assume positive effects as
scandal elections become more common). The concluding section discusses possible
interpretations and implications.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350717_2009_19_kumlin_esaiasson.pdf
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Date
2009-07Author
Kumlin, Staffan
Esaiasson, Peter
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2009:19
Language
eng