Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Acronyms
- Acknowledgments
- INTRODUCTION: SURVIVING DEMOCRACY
- 1 THE ROOTS OF REGENERATION: COMMUNIST PRACTICES AND ELITE RESOURCES
- 2 BREAKING WITH THE PAST, REORGANIZING FOR THE FUTURE
- 3 DEVELOPING PROGRAMMATIC RESPONSIVENESS
- 4 CONVINCING THE VOTERS: CAMPAIGNS AND ELECTIONS
- 5 PARLIAMENTARY EFFECTIVENESS AND COALITIONS
- CONCLUSION: SUCCEEDING IN DEMOCRACY
- APPENDIX A THE CONTENT ANALYSIS OF PROGRAMS
- APPENDIX B THE QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ELECTORATES
- APPENDIX C THE STRUCTURES OF COMPETITION
- Bibliography
- Index
- Titles in the series
4 - CONVINCING THE VOTERS: CAMPAIGNS AND ELECTIONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Acronyms
- Acknowledgments
- INTRODUCTION: SURVIVING DEMOCRACY
- 1 THE ROOTS OF REGENERATION: COMMUNIST PRACTICES AND ELITE RESOURCES
- 2 BREAKING WITH THE PAST, REORGANIZING FOR THE FUTURE
- 3 DEVELOPING PROGRAMMATIC RESPONSIVENESS
- 4 CONVINCING THE VOTERS: CAMPAIGNS AND ELECTIONS
- 5 PARLIAMENTARY EFFECTIVENESS AND COALITIONS
- CONCLUSION: SUCCEEDING IN DEMOCRACY
- APPENDIX A THE CONTENT ANALYSIS OF PROGRAMS
- APPENDIX B THE QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF ELECTORATES
- APPENDIX C THE STRUCTURES OF COMPETITION
- Bibliography
- Index
- Titles in the series
Summary
With the advent of democracy, the communist successor parties confronted a challenge their predecessors had long forgotten: free political competition. The communist successors had to cope with a profusion of polarized competitors, inchoate electoral institutions, and an electorate whose priorities and preferences were not fully clear. All these made formulating a winning electoral strategy difficult, and forming stable governing coalition even more so. Yet only an electoral victory or participation in a parliamentary coalition would give the parties their ultimate goal: a return to governance, this time in a democratic system.
The configuration of environmental conditions made certain electoral strategies especially likely to succeed. First, the parties had been forced to exit from power, and were largely discredited by 1989. They consequently could not rely either on patronage, appeals to nostalgia, or extremist ideologies. Second, the electorates were fluid – the preferences of the voters were often unclear, making narrow appeals riskier. Third, the electoral institutions placed a premium on attractive electoral personalities: national party lists (in the Czech Republic, Poland, and Hungary), single-member districts (in Hungary), and open party lists (in Poland). As we will see in this chapter, these conditions favored responsive appeals addressed to broad electorates, new dimensions of competition that got around the parties' discreditation, and cohesive national campaigns.
How well each party could cope with these environmental challenges, however, depended on elite political resources and earlier organizational transformation. These could produce both the cohesive campaigns and the cross-cutting appeals that would prove key to winning elections in postcommunist democracies.
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- Redeeming the Communist PastThe Regeneration of Communist Parties in East Central Europe, pp. 175 - 226Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002