Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Does Party Competition Affect Political Activism?

Does Party Competition Affect Political Activism?

488/2020 Anselm Hager, Lukas Hensel, Johannes Hermle and Christopher Roth
working papers,political economy
Journal of Politics
https://doi.org/10.1086/712140

488/2020 Anselm Hager, Lukas Hensel, Johannes Hermle and Christopher Roth

Does party competition affect political activism? This paper studies the decision of party supporters to join political campaigns. We present a framework that incorporates supporters’ instrumental and expressive motives and illustrates that party competition can either increase or decrease party activism. To distinguish between these competing predictions, we implemented a field experiment with a European party during a national election. In a seemingly unrelated party survey, we randomly assigned 1,417 party supporters to true information that the canvassing activity of the main competitor party was exceptionally high. Using unobtrusive, real-time data on party supporters’ canvassing behavior, we find that treated respondents are 30 percent less likely to go canvassing. To investigate the causal mechanism, we leverage additional survey evidence collected two months after the campaign. Consistent with affective accounts of political activism, we show that increased competition lowered party supporters’ political self-efficacy, which plausibly led them to remain inactive.

Political Economy

Journal of Politics

https://doi.org/10.1086/712140