The Electoral Effects Of General Strikes In Western Europe

Abstract

General strikes against unpopular policy reforms have occurred with increasing frequency across Western Europe since 1980. These strikes, in conjunction with governments' willingness to offer concessions in their wake, raise the question of whether they have electoral consequences. We analyze how the interaction between general strikes and social spending retrenchment, as well as the interaction between social pacts and social spending retrenchment, influence electoral outcomes for governments for sixteen Western European countries (EU15 plus Norway) from 1980-2012. We find that electoral losses for incumbents engaging in welfare retrenchment are magnified by a general strike during the electoral cycle, but are mitigated if a social pact is concluded in the same electoral cycle. These magnifying and mitigating effects are greater the closer a general strike or a social pact is to an election. Our results suggest that general strikes, unlike social pacts, serve the important function of blame attribution, as they publically assign the responsibility of retrenchment policies to incumbents.

Publication Date

10-1-2016

Publication Title

Comparative Politics

Volume

49

Issue

1

Number of Pages

63-82

Document Type

Editorial Material

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.5129/001041516819582900

Socpus ID

84990837116 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84990837116

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