Do Voters Sometimes Support Parties They Actually Disagree With? - podcast episode cover

Do Voters Sometimes Support Parties They Actually Disagree With?

Mar 13, 202542 minEp. 133
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Episode description

In elections across democracies, we assume voters cast ballots for candidates whose policies align with their interests. But what happens when that's not the case? This week, we unpack a political puzzle from Japan: the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) keeps winning elections despite voters consistently rejecting their policies.

Through groundbreaking research from Yale political scientist Shiro Kuriwaki, “Winning Elections with Unpopular Policies: Valence Advantage and Single-Party Dominance in Japan” we delve into why voters might choose candidates whose platforms they fundamentally disagree with. Is it trust, competence, or something more complicated?

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Do Voters Sometimes Support Parties They Actually Disagree With? | Not Another Politics Podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast