Explaining Citizen Attitudes to Strategies of Democratic Defense in Europe: A Resource in Responses to Contemporary Challenges to Liberal Democracy?

Author:

de Leeuw Sjifra E1ORCID,Bourne Angela K2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Science, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Institute for Social Science and Business, Roskilde University, Denmark

Abstract

Abstract It has long been speculated that banning parties from participation in elections may be counterproductive because it might provoke societal resistance. Using the European Social Survey (2002–2010; N = 195,405), our study suggests otherwise. We demonstrate that party bans enjoy the legitimacy of majority support. This holds true irrespective of countries’ resilience to extremist influences (or lack thereof) resulting from “institutional intolerance,” electoral entry barriers and authoritarian legacies. Individual orientations toward the democratic establishment do matter to a small extent: citizens with authoritarian tendencies and low system support are less supportive, while this is less so for citizens with extremist ideological orientations. Even though party bans entail significant democratic dilemmas, this study reveals societal resources supportive of repressive responses to extremist parties.

Funder

Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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