Affiliation:
1. Political Science and International Relations Programme, Victoria University of Wellington, P.O. Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand
2. P.O. Box 46, Diamond Harbour 8030, Canterbury, New Zealand
Abstract
The motives, behaviour, treatment and fate of parties which, rather than joining governments provide them with a working legislative majority, are not well studied. In the light of coalition theory, we explore these issues by way of observation research on New Zealand's Green Party - since 1999 a support party to a minority centre-left government. We isolate three factors important in coming to this type of arrangement - ideology, calculation and the institutional environment - all mediated by party system variation. The relative importance of each factor, however, is less significant than the links and trade-offs between and within them. We go on to show how non-institutionalized support arrangements are unlikely to be `win-win' situations, leading to frustrations which themselves may become a factor in the decision to support or join after the next election.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
20 articles.
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