
Kazuma Mizukoshi
The dynamics of electoral politics in contemporary Latin America have changed considerably since the democratic transition period of the 1980s and 1990s. Some established parties have broken down, even while some parties on the left and right that proved less competitive in founding elections managed over time to expand their support and increase their representation in national legislatures. How were they able to do so? The key to answering this question lies in their capacity to nationalize their support bases by building up programme-based elite and mass linkages. The Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores, PT) in Brazil has been among the most successful parties in drawing a nation-wide swing of support towards them. The principal works in the literature on party nationalization cannot account for such an equalizing swing of support because they mostly focus on variations between countries, not between parties. Hence it is important to take both elite and mass electoral preferences into account. For a party to succeed in nationalizing its support base, the left-right stances of individual politicians and supporters should be as collectively coherent along national issues between electoral districts as they would be within each district. My PhD thesis develops this argument by focusing on the PT in Brazil. The empirical analysis draws on a series of elite and mass public opinion surveys conducted between 1997 and 2014.
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