Volume 52, Issue 1 p. 71-93
Original Article

European integration and electoral democracy: How the European Union constrains party competition in the Member States

KYRIAKI NANOU

Corresponding Author

KYRIAKI NANOU

University of Oxford, UK

Kyriaki Nanou, Anglo-German Research Fellow, Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford, Manor Road, Oxford OX1 3UQ, UK. Tel.: +44 (0)1865 285983; E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
HAN DORUSSEN

HAN DORUSSEN

University of Essex, UK

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First published: 13 June 2012
Citations: 32

Abstract

The assignment of policy competencies to the European Union has reduced the divergence of party policy positions nationally, leaving the electorate with fewer policy options. Building upon insights from spatial proximity theories of party competition, the convergence argument predicts convergence particularly in policy domains with increasing EU competence. As the policy commitments that derive from EU membership increase, parties become more constrained in terms of the feasible policy alternative they can implement when in office. The analysis uses manifesto data at the country-party system level for nine policy domains. It uses ordinary least squares (OLS) estimation with country fixed effects, a lagged dependent variable and country corrected standard errors. Controlling for other factors that could plausibly explain policy convergence, the models also assess whether the convergent effect of party positions varies across different types of parties. The main finding is that in policy domains where the involvement of the EU has increased, the distance between parties' positions tends to decrease. The constraining impact of EU policy decisions differs between Member and non-Member States. This effect is more apparent for the policy agendas of larger, mainstream and pro-EU parties in the Member States.