Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
10 Νοε 2009 · Jenson, “Party Strategy and Party Identification,” focusses primarily on the de-stabilizing forces of the Diefenbaker period in Canada. Her article is a good example of how attention to specific, plausible, well documented forces can explain the higher than normal levels of vote defection and changes of party identification.
discussion of party identification. Sniderman et al., implicitly accepting the first definition of party identification, have confused the issue of the existence of party loyalty, separate from short-run vote preference, and the long-run stability of that preference for all Canadians. However, the second ar-gument made here is methodological. The
Abstract. This article examines changes in individuals' identification with Canadian federal political parties in the period 1977 to 1981. The analysis suggests that differences in class and ideology have a significant, if not very large effect on shifts in partisan identity.
We propose a detailed examination of the way party identification is being measured in three countries: Britain, Canada, and the United States. We also. tion Study (ANES), the 1997 British Election Study (BES), and the 1997 Canadian Election Study (CES).
Party identification is an early socialized, enduring, affective psychological identification with a specific political party. Some of the first empirical studies of voting behavior in the United States discovered the concept, and it is now incorporated in electoral studies in most democratic nations.
1 Ιουν 2010 · In Canada, for example, the Canada Elections Act defines a political party as: “an organization one of whose fundamental purpose is to participate in public affairs by endorsing one or more of its members as candidates and supporting their election.”
7 Φεβ 2006 · As of 2015, there were 23 registered political parties in Canada. The five major federal parties are the Liberal Party, the Conservative Party of Canada, the New Democratic Party (NDP), the Bloc Québécois and the Green Party of Canada.