Trustworthiness, Stability and Productivity of Minority Governments in Australia

Author:

Brenton Scott1ORCID,Pickering Heath2

Affiliation:

1. School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne, Parkville VIC 3010, Australia

2. Public Governance Institute, KU Leuven, Belgium

Abstract

Abstract In this study, we question commonly held negative perceptions of minority governments and determine whether they can be trusted to deliver on the promises contained in governance agreements, whether they are stable in being able to govern over full terms of parliament, and whether they are productive in being able to successfully pass legislation. We examine eight minority government agreements and the following eight majority government opening parliamentary agendas in Australian national and state governments from 1989 to 2018 and compare their performance using legislative data. The main differences are not how long they last or how much legislation they pass, but rather that majority governments generally make more commitments, particularly more policy-focused commitments. They are also more successful in fulfilling their promises, albeit not completely. We theorise that major parties faced with having to form a minority government agreement will overpromise in order to secure power but can underdeliver due to the risks for minor parties and independents in forcing elections over breaches.

Funder

the University of Melbourne Early Career Researcher Grant

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science

Reference44 articles.

1. Leadership Lessons: Minority Governments, Independents and Relationships;Arklay;Australian Journal of Politics & History,2014

2. Introduction: Comparing the Legislative Performance of Legislatures;Arter;The Journal of Legislative Studies,2006

3. Electoral Promises and Minority Governments: An Empirical Study;Artés;European Journal of Political Research,2008

4. Do Spanish Politicians Keep Their Promises?;Artés;Party Politics,2013

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