Volume 37, Issue 3 p. 309-333

Political parties in parliamentary democracies: Making delegation and accountability work

WOLFGANG C. MÜLLER

Corresponding Author

WOLFGANG C. MÜLLER

University of Vienna, Austria

Wolfgang C. Müller Department of Government, University of Vienna, Hohenstaufengasse 9, A–1010 Vienna, Austria Phone: +43 1 4277 38306; Fax: +43 1 4277 9383; E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 26 September 2003
Citations: 184

Abstract

Abstract. In modern democracies political parties exist because (1) they reduce transaction costs in the electoral, parliamentary and governmental arenas and (2) help overcome the dilemma of collective action. In Western Europe political parties are the central mechanism to make the constitutional chain of political delegation and accountability work in practice. Party representatives in public office are ultimately the agents of the extra–parliamentary party organization. In order to contain agency loss parties rely on party–internal mechanisms and the institutionalisation of party rights in public rules and, in contrast to US parties, they apply the full range of ex ante and ex post mechanisms. Generally, the role of party is weaker the further down the chain of delegation.