Miguel Carreras Scott Morgenstern


Table 1: 11 Scenarios of Partisan Alignment Evolution Table 2



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Table 1: 11 Scenarios of Partisan Alignment Evolution


Table 2: Categorization Criteria





High

Medium

Low

Total Volatility

V >20

10

V< 10

Top-2 Volatility

T> 10

5

T< 5

New Party Support

N> 20

10

N<10


Table 3: Volatility, Top-2 Volatility, and Support for New Parties across Latin America (1980-2012)/1


Top 2 Volatility (2nd letter) and Change in Support for New Party (3rd letter)







------------High Top 2 Volatility------------

------------Medium Top 2 Volatility------------

------------Low Top 2 Volatility------------







High support

new party



Medium support new party

Low support

new party



High support

new party



Medium support new party

Low support

new party



High support

new party



Medium support new party

Low support

new party



Volatility (1st letter)

High total

volatility



VTN

Ecuador 2009

Guatemala 2003

Nicaragua 2006

Paraguay 2003

Peru 1990, 2011



VTn

Brazil 1990

Colombia 1991

Peru 2001, 2006

Venezuela 1993


VTN

Mexico 2009

Venezuela 2010


VtN

Bolivia 1989, 2002, 05

Costa Rica 2002

Guatemala 1994, 2007, 11

Peru 1985, 95, 00

Venezuela 2000



Vtn

Ecuador 1984

Guatemala 1999

Panama 1999




VtN

Argentina 1997

D Republic 1994, 98

Ecuador 1990

Uruguay 2004


VTN

Bolivia 1993

Ecuador 2006

Nicaragua 2011

Venezuela 1998


VTn

Bolivia 1997

Ecuador 1992

Venezuela 2005




VTN

Argentina 2009, 11

D Republic 2006

Ecuador 1988

Panama 2004, 09


Medium total

volatility



vTN

vTn

vTN

D Republic 1990




vtN*

Costa Rica 2006




vtn

Argentina 1985

Ecuador 2002


vtN

Argentina 1987, 2001, 07

Brazil 2002

Colombia 2002

Ecuador 1998

Mexico 1997, 2000

Uruguay 1994


vTN*

Argentina 1995

Bolivia 2009

Colombia 2006

El Salv. 1994, 97


vTn

Ecuador 1986




vTN

Argentina 2003

Brazil 1998

Colombia 1990

Costa Rica 1982, 86

D Republic 1986

Ecuador 1994, 96

El Salv 1988, 2012

Guatemala 1995

Honduras 2009

Mexico 1994, 2006, 12

Uruguay 1989

Venezuela 1983





Low total

volatility



VTN

VTn

VTN

VtN

Vtn

VtN

Colombia 1986

D Republic 1982, 02

El Salv. 1991, 2006

Nicaragua 1996, 2001

Paraguay 1998

Uruguay 1999


VTN*

Brazil 1994

Colombia 2010

Paraguay 2008




VTn

VTN

Argentina 1989, 91, 93, 99, 2005

Brazil 2006, 10

Chile 1993, 97, 2001, 05, 09

Colombia 1982, 94, 98

Costa Rica 1990, 94, 98, 2010

D Republic 2010

El Salv. 2000, 03, 09

Honduras 1985, 89, 93, 97, 2001, 05

Mexico 2003

Uruguay 2009

Venezuela 1988



/1 V, T, and N refer to total volatility (V), top-two volatility (T), and support for new parties (N). Capital letters imply high levels, small letters imply medium levels, and subscripts are low levels, as defined in Table 2.

* The high volatility for the new parties is the result of parties appearing in their second election. In the second year the new parties were relatively stable, thus not generating high total volatility.



Table 4: The Evolution of Partisan Alignment in Latin America: A Classification


Figure 1: Traditional Framework of Partisan Alignments

Figure 2. Evolution of Partisan Alignment in Latin America (1980-2012)


SCENARIO 1: STABLE ALIGNMENT (CHILE)




SCENARIO 2: REALIGNMENT BETWEEN EXISTING PARTIES (DOMINICAN REPUBLIC)




SCENARIO 3: REALIGNMENT FAVORING A NEW PARTY (COSTA RICA)







Figure 2 (continued). Evolution of Partisan Alignment in Latin America (1980-2012)


SCENARIO 4: ALIGNMENT TO NON-ALIGNMENT (COLOMBIA)




SCENARIO 5: ALIGNMENT TO PARTIAL ALIGNMENT (ARGENTINA)




SCENARIO 7: CONTINUAL NON-ALIGNMENT (GUATEMALA)







Figure 2 (continued). Evolution of Partisan Alignment in Latin America (1980-2012)

SCENARIO 8: NON-ALIGNMENT TO PARTIAL ALIGNMENT (VENEZUELA 2000-2010)




SCENARIO 10: PARTIAL ALIGNMENT TO NON-ALIGNMENT (BOLIVIA)




SCENARIO 11: CONTINUAL PARTIAL ALIGNMENT (BRAZIL)







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1Endnotes
 Actually, some of the party systems that were classified as “institutionalized” in this book –e.g. Colombia and Venezuela– have become much more inchoate in the last fifteen years.

2 Using extensive empirical evidence, Mayhew (2002: 165) criticizes the concept of realignment as "too slippery, too binary, too apocalyptic" for studying the American party system. However, Campbell (2006) and Paulson (2007) have challenged Mayhew's critical assertion by providing more nuanced analyses, suggesting that realignment indeed occurred in American electoral history. We acknowledge that the concept of realignment might have its limitations for understanding the party system development in Latin America. However, we agree with these latter authors, as well as many earlier ones who have studied the concept, that realignment is useful for conceptualizing party systems.

3 The concept of partisan alignment most clearly describes the strength and the stability of partisan loyalties in the electorate. However, the evolution of voters’ alignments has direct implications for the party system. In the rest of this paper, therefore, we follow conventional usage and use expressions such as “dealigned” or “realigned” countries or party systems to refer to party systems that are undergoing a process of partisan dealignment or realignment.

4 This type of dealignment appears to be affecting industrialized democracies. Traditional political parties in these countries have been unable to incorporate “post-material” issues into their programs, thereby producing the dealignment of a sizable portion of the electorate --especially the younger generations. See Dalton (2000) and Inglehart (1997).

5 Outsiders are inexperienced politicians who participate in the elections as political independents or in association with new parties

6 A second meaning of the term realignment refers to enduring changes in support for a party within a group (see Petrocik, 1981: 15-20). Since we lack reliable and comparable survey data for the whole period (1980-2010), in this paper we focus in the shifts in the aggregate level of support for the different parties in the system.

7 If the new party is an anti-systemic party (e.g. Cambio 90 in Peru), we would take this as evidence of dealignment. It is important to make this distinction between systemic and anti-systemic new parties.

8 If the party system is fractionalized and very volatile, it is easier to categorize the case as an example of an unaligned or a dealigned electorate. A case that combines multipartism and low volatility is harder to classify.

9 This is also true for the recent electoral turn to the left in Latin America, where five different left-leaning presidents were elected in 11 countries between 1998 and 2011. Roberts (2012) argues that Latin America's left turn is not the result of more people identifying themselves as leftists; rather, it is attributable in part to retrospective economic voting behavior. In short, an electoral realignment does not necessarily imply an ideological realignment.

10 In this paper we focus on electoral data but we did run some analyses using LAPOP data to verify the very blurry lines that divide most of the parties. This analysis is available upon request from the authors.

11 Recent studies have attempted to analyze the evolution of mass partisanship in many Latin American countries using survey data. For instance, see Moreno and Méndez (2007), Morgan (2007), and Samuels (2006).

12 The Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP) survey data are available for some countries since 2004, but many countries joined in later waves.

13 The Pedersen Index is calculated as halving the sum of the absolute change in all party vote shares (or seats) between two elections, which yields a scale from 0 to 100, with a higher value indicating a higher level of volatility. In this paper, we only considered parties that have obtained at least 5% of the votes in the calculation of the Index. When a party changed its name, we counted it as being the same organization. If two or more parties formed a coalition for election T2, but competed in election T1 as separate parties, we divided the vote share of the coalition by the number of parties as if each of them ran election T2 individually. If the coalition continued from elections T2 to T3, we consider this coalition as a single party organization over time.

14 An alternative scheme could consider a constant base year, but we wanted to evaluate changes from each electoral period.

15 We focus on larger new parties (those that obtained at least 5% of votes) instead of all new parties because most electoral data group small parties as an “Other” category, which makes it difficult to parse out votes for small new parties and votes for small old parties.

16 One limitation of this system is that it evaluates change between each two elections, and thus does not permit a longer-term view. We attend to this limitation in our qualitative analysis.

17 The on-line appendix includes a complete set of the logical scenarios, based on a system of five parties. It shows why some combinations of values of the different variables are incompatible, such as high levels of volatility among the top two parties but low volatility overall. It also provides details about interpreting Table 3.

18 The country descriptions not presented here are available online (web address will be added after peer review).

19 Electoral coalitions are common at the provincial level in Argentina. To make the calculation more precise, we used the district-level electoral data. We added the vote shares of all Peronista parties together as the vote for PJ at the national level. The vote share for UCR in a provincial-level coalition where UCR formed with another party is calculated as half of the votes of the coalition.

20 For the case of Guatemala, see Sanchez (2008); for the case of Panamá, see Otero Felipe (2006).


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