Author:
González-Ocantos Ezequiel,Meléndez Carlos
Abstract
What determines the vote in referenda: issue-preferences or second-order considerations? Scholars suggest issue-voting is stronger in salient elections. Based on survey data collected during Chile's constitutional referendum, the article challenges this argument. An innovative conjoint
experiment allows us to estimate if different elements of the constitution sunk the proposal. Coupled with vote choice models, results indicate that second-order considerations played a more important role than the literature predicts. We argue this is because studies mostly study referenda
on European integration in parliamentary systems. Unlike European integration, the constitutional proposal was not a cross-cutting "issue," but one tied to the incumbent. Presidentialism exacerbated government/opposition dynamics, such that the incumbent's popularity significantly affected
vote choice. We discuss why this is similar to what transpired in other Latin American countries and draw lessons for participatory democracy.
Publisher
Comparative Politics CUNY
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
1 articles.
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