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A History of Electoral Socialism Adam Przeworski and John Sprague
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StoneS A
Adam
History ot Electoral Socialism
Przeworski and John Sprague
At the end of the nineteenth century, several
political
Europe entered into electoral politics with the goal of winning an overwhelming majority of votes for parties in
socialism. Elections were to open the “parliamentary
road” to socialism; they were to bring a “peaceful revolution.” Barricades
were no longer needed when work-
ers could cast ballots: votes political party has ever
program offering
were “paper stones.” Yet no
won an electoral
majority on a
a socialist transformation of society.
Adam Przeworski and John Sprague explain why. (Continued on back
flap)
Jacket illustration:
This allegory of the
famous Swiss
Battle of
Sempach was used on an electoral broadside by the
Swiss Democratic Social Party in the 1890’s.
Printed in U.S. A.
xsisz OMNIV/^
CIVIVAl ^aseecLO!
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„PAPER_
Stones
A History of Electoral Socialism
Adam Przeworski and John Sprague
The University of Chicago Press Chicago and London
Adam Przeworski
is
Martin A. Ryerson Distinguished Service Professor of
Political Science, University
of Chicago, and the author of Capitalism and Social
Democracy. John Sprague
is
University
Court and
in St. is
Louis.
He
co-author with
is
professor of political science, Washington the author of Voting Patterns of the U.S.
Adam
Supreme
Przeworski of Systems Analysis for Social
Scientists.
The University of Chicago
Press,
The University of Chicago
Press, Ltd.,
©
Chicago 60637
London
1986 by The University of Chicago
All rights reserved. Published 1986
Printed in the United States of
America
95 94 93 92 91 90 89 88 87 86 5 4 3 2
This project was supported
Foundation, to
SOC75- 17906
in part
1
by grants from the National Science
to the University
of Chicago and
Washington University.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Przeworski,
Adam.
Paper stones.
Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1.
Elections
—
History.
3.
Socialist parties
11.
Title.
—
2.
Voting
History.
1.
—
History.
Sprague, John.
HI. Title: Electoral socialism.
JF1027.P79
1986
ISBN 0-226-68497-0
324.9
86-6984
SOC75-I7456
Contents
Prologue /
2
j
1
Electoral Participation and The Decision to Participate
Its
Consequences
13 13
Electoral Participation and Class Organization
18
Socialism and Electoralism
22
Great Expectations
25
The Dilemma of Electoral Socialism
29
The Magic Workers as
Barrier
29
a Minority
31
Allies
40
Party Strategy and Class Ideology
45
Party Strategy and Class Organization
52
The Dilemma of
55
Electoral Socialism
The Stagnation of the Socialist Vote
57
Electoral Trade-Off
57
Party Strategies and the Vote
79
Causes of Stagnation
88
Appendix
96
The
Contents
vi '
4
\
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
101
Choice and Necessity
101
The Realm of Choice Vote Maximizing Strategies
103
Was
109
the Stagnation of the Socialist
Vote Inevitable?
113
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
119
Appendix
126
Pure Strategies
Time Paths of
the Vote
127
Under Pure
Strategies
128
Carrying Capacities Associated with Pure 131
Strategies
Would
Different Assumptions
Make Much
Difference?
133
Vote Maximizing Strategies
j
The Voting Behavior of Individuals Conflicts
Over Class and
138
143
the Voting Behavior
of Individuals
143
Electoral History and the Act of Voting
147
Historical Patterns of Class Voting
158
Clinching Evidence
167
Epilogue
181
Appendix The Calculations The Data
187
Bibliography
203
Name Index
217
Subject Index
221
187
192
Prologue One should
modem
stress the
importance and significance which,
world, political parties have
in the
in the
elaboration and dif-
fusion of a conception of the world, because essentially what
they do
is
to these
work out
to
the ethics
and the
conceptions and act, as
it
politics
corresponding
were, as their historical
‘laboratory’.
Antonio Gramsci
No
political party
ever
won
an electoral majority on a program
offering a socialist transformation of society. At the end of the
nineteenth century, as socialist parties entered into the competi-
saw in universal suffrage an institution that working class to proceed from “political to so-
tion for votes, they
would allow the cial
emancipation,” as Marx had put
tions
were
were
to bring
to
it
fifty
years earlier. Elec-
open the “parliamentary road”
to socialism; they
about a “peaceful revolution” from a society based
would provide conditions for universal liberation. Barricades were no longer needed when workers could cast ballots: votes were “paper stones.” The syllogism was simple and persuasive. Since most people suffer from poverty and oppression inherent in the capitalist organization of society, and since elections are decided by numbers, socialism would become the electoral expression of an immense majority. Great masses would provide the mandate for legislating society into socialism. Socialism was the telos, universal suffrage on the exploitation of workers to one
was
to
be the instrument, and yet
it
that
has never happened,
at least
not thus far.
Involvement ties
were
in electoral politics
to establish roots
symbolic.
As long
among
was
inevitable
if socialist
workers. Nor could
it
par-
be merely
as participation in electoral competition
is
in-
Prologue
2
strumental for improving the conditions of workers in the short
mass following must avail itself of this opportunity. In spite of the distrust which the plunge into electoral politics often evoked among socialists, abstention was never a feasible option. Workers did not become organized as a political party everywhere; but wherever they can, working-
run, any political party that seeks a
class parties
do
participate in electoral competition.
Observers often saw dilemmas in
any of the institutions of
“Whatever seeks
in the
involvement of workers
capitalist society, including elections.
to
extend
—
this
itself
under domination runs the
risk
would be the fate of working-class organizations under capitalism (Horkheimer 1973:5). In order to real-
of reproducing it”
ize the revolutionary goal
class parties
must
avail themselves of the opportunities that exist
in capitalist society.
tion
is
of bringing about socialism, working-
But to the extent to which electoral participa-
instrumental in improving the condition of workers within
the confines of capitalism, socialism sary. Socialism
is
no longer urgently neces-
cannot be achieved without participation
cratic institutions, but participation
in
demo-
erodes the will for socialism:
bemoaned dilemma of democratic socialism. Yet the protagonists socialist leaders who marched their parties onto electoral battlefields never saw their choice as a dilemma. They entered electoral politics with the goal of winning an overwhelming popular mandate for socialism, even if they were comthis is the frequently
—
—
pelled to enter by the need to improve the immediate conditions of
knew
workers. They entered with ultimate goals and they
they
would win. This divergence between cause and purpose of rationalization. Yet the crucial question
is
is
perhaps a sign
not about the moti-
vations of party leaders but about the effect of electoral participation
on the movement for socialism.
It
is
a
question about
conditions which are independent of anyone’s will, about the structure of the situation in in a
which a
socialist
movement
finds itself
democratic capitalist society.
The decision
to participate
is
but a prologue to the history of
socialism, but prologues delimit the entire play. socialist parties
electoral
elections
Once
leaders of
decided to enter into electoral competition, the
system structured their future choices. To be effective
—
for
whatever goals
—
a
party must win
votes,
in
and
Prologue
3
votes are measured in numbers.
Hence
the parties that organize workers
suoport elsewhere
the perpetual issue facing
whether or not
is
to seek elec-
in the society.
Leaders of socialist parties
must repeatedly decide whether or not
to seek electoral success at
toral
the cost, or at least the risk, of diluting class lines
and conse-
quently diminishing the salience of class as a motive for the politi-
behavior of workers themselves.
cal
Contrary to the enthusiastic expectations with which socialist leaders initially joined the
who “had
letarians
game of
nothing to
elections, workers
sell
“nothing to lose but their chains”
—
the pro-
power” and
but their labor
— never became
a numerical
majority in any society. Hence the electoral mandate for socialism
could not be obtained from workers alone. Democratic institm tions played a perverse trick with socialist intentions
—
the
eman-
cipation of the working classes could not be the task of workers
themselves
if this
emancipation was to be accomplished through
elections.
Given the minority
status of workers, leaders of class-based
must choose between a party homogeneous
parties
in
its
class
appeal but sentenced to perpetual electoral defeats or a party that struggles for electoral success at the cost of diluting entation. This labor,
ocratic,
is
its
class ori-
the alternative presented to socialist, social
communist, and other
combination of class structure and
parties
dem-
by the particular
political institutions
found
in
democratic capitalist societies. This choice priori
reason
dence
to
is
not between revolution and reform. There
— pace
Lukacs (1971:60)
— and
no
is
no
a
historical evi-
suppose that a minority, class-pure, electoral party of
workers would be any more revolutionary than a majority party heterogeneous ties
in its class basis.
Indeed, class-pure, electoral par-
of workers, of which the Social Democratic Party of Germany
(SPD) during the Weimar period
is
perhaps the prime example,
can be committed exclusively to the defense of corporate interests of workers within the confines of capitalism.
A
pure party of
workers constituting a majority of the electorate could have per-
commitments without compromise, as sothey would when they saw the working class as
haps maintained cialists
said
its
majoritarian. But to continue as a minority party dedicated ex-
clusively to ultimate goals in a system which requires a major-
4
ity
Prologue
— more,
these goals
produces
an overwhelming mandate
—
to
would have been absurd. Keeping
To
a party class pure
of guardians of the eternal flame (Schum-
at best a sect
peter 1942).
attempt to realize
gain electoral influence for whatever aims, from
the ultimate to the
most immediate, working class parties had
to
seek support from other people, to enter into alliances, and to
make compromises. The
decision to participate in elections inel-
uctably altered the logic of revolutionary transformations.
A
ma-
composed of workers could not provide the mandate for socialism because workers never became a majority. The only question was whether a majority for socialism, and indeed for any more proximate goals, could be obtained by seeking electoral sup-
jority
port
among people
other than workers.
With the support of workers alone or of the people electoral majorities turned out to be an elusive goal.
in general,
No party won
an electoral majority on a program offering a socialist transformation of society, but very
few won majorities with any program.
Elections rarely result in majorities: about one election in fifteen yields the majority of votes cast to a single party.
And
there
is
no
magic number of 50 percent. Why has no party ever obtained an overwhelming mandate in a free election, reason to stop
for anything?
at the
How
does
happen
it
that
no party has ever obtained
the support of one-half of those entitled to vote?
When,
at the
beginning of the century, socialist leaders witnessed the spectacular
growth of
ing majority elections.
seemed
And
winning an overwhelm-
their electoral strength,
yet
just
all
a
matter of time, indeed of a few
extrapolations remained frustrated
down
—
so-
some share of the vote typically inferior to 50 percent. All growth was arrested as it approached 50 percent, almost as if electoral institutions were designed in a way cialist parties settled
that
would prevent any
to
political force
from obtaining overwhelm-
ing support for any social transformation.
What kind of system is it that socialists got themselves into? Can parties that appeal to workers win an overwhelming majority of votes given the class structure of industrialized capitalist societies? Is there an inherent
dilemma
that
date for socialism impossible to obtain?
makes an overwhelming victory of any gram, impossible
?
What
is
makes an Is this a
mandilemma that
electoral
party, behind any pro-
the range of choice available to so-
Prologue
5
Have they exploited them?
cialist parties?
available to
To answer the way they
the opportunities historically
we need do know much
these questions
do.
We
know why people
to
vote
about voting; few social
phenomena have been studied as extensively as the voting behavior of individuals. With the aid of surveys, social scientists have accumulated detailed information about the voting patterns of persons located variously in the social structure and characterized by
and preferences. While
differing opinions, attitudes,
France small farmers are more likely to vote Left, agricultural laborers are
worker
more prone
he works
if
his father
in a large factory,
would be surprised Catholic
do
so.
A
southern
in Italy landless
Swedish manual
almost certain to vote for the Social Democrats
is
graduated from high school, er, if
to
in
widow
and
is
was
anywhere but
to find
voting socialist.
empirical knowledge, the reasons
in
And yet, why these
he
manual work-
also a
a union
if
member. But we
Austria an elderly
in spite
of this rich
people vote the
way
they do remain unclear.
The
first
surveys of voting were conducted with the hope that a
few factors would turn out rection of voting, that their
to
have a dominant impact on the
list
would be
short,
di-
and the explana-
Appendix A to Voting (Berelson et al. 1954) to see what happened to this hope over two hundred factors had some bearing on the vote. It seems as if everything had some relation to the way people vote and with tion almost complete.
Yet
it is
sufficient to look at
nothing being truly decisive.
Most hopes were pinned on class. Class is indeed one factor for which there are good reasons to expect that it should shape patterns of voting. “A relation between class position and voting behavior,” a typical argument ran, “is a natural and expected association in the Western democracies for a
number of
reasons:
the existence of class interests, the representation of these interests
by
political parties,
and the regular association of certain
parties with certain interests. tion order
and the way
different class interests,
Given the character of
the stratifica-
political parties act as representatives of it
would be remarkable
if
such a relation
were not found” (Alford 1967:68-69; also Alford 1963). And
was often found,
for
example by
Lipset:
“The
it
simplest explana-
Prologue
6
widespread pattern
tion of this
The
leftist parties
change
order to
in
of equality; the lower-income groups sup-
become economically
higher-income groups oppose them
nomic advantages. The
in
better off, while the
order to maintain their eco-
statistical fact
dence of the importance of class If societies
simple economic self-interest.
represent themselves as instruments of social
in the direction
them
port
is
can then be taken as evi-
in political
behavior”
are differentiated in terms of class,
if
located in the class structure share interests, and
(
1963:29).
persons similarly if
parties differ in
representing these interests, then indeed people can be expected to vote on the basis of their class position.
Many
people do. Survey studies indicate that between 60 and
80 percent of the voters
in
Western Europe and the Anglo-Saxon
countries cast their ballots in a tion in the class structure.
whelming. tives,
A
manner consistent with
But these patterns are
far
their loca-
from over-
large part of British workers choose the Conserva-
supposedly out of deference for their inherited
skills in
han-
complex matters of governance. Women generally tend to vote for conservative parties more frequently than men of the same class. Religious persons often express their confessional dling the
identification at the polls. Ethnic, linguistic, racial, or regional identification leads to voting that cuts across class divisions. In-
deed, class
some observers have concluded is
the
that religion rather than
most important determinant of voting (Rose and Urwin
1969). Several students of voting behavior maintain that tification
is
iden-
with parties rather than with any social groups that moti-
vates voting decisions, arguing that there are
reasons
it
why
good psychological
class should not matter (Converse 1958). Still others
see voting not as a matter of expressing identifies or prior
commit-
ments but as calculated decisions made independently by
indi-
viduals for each election.
Most of these explanations
—
in
terms of class, age, sex, edu-
cation, religion, ethnicity, party identification, or region the
same
logic.
They
cite individual attributes to explain indi-
vidual acts. In this logic tified as
— have
some
social distinctions are first objec-
cleavages. Places in these cleavages are attributed to
individuals, and after this reduction the locations in the structure
of society appear as individual
woman. These
traits are
traits,
such as worker. Catholic, or
thought to determine acts because they
Prologue
are
7
viewed as representing
and the
logical attachments,
Through
this
like.
reduction the locus of causality
each individual. Social relations are reduced to tions of individual traits.
havior
mode
in this
A
class
is
more
is
placed within
statistical distribu-
successful explanation of voting be-
of analysis consists of finding a
covariation between individual traits and acts. sufficient,
norms, psycho-
interests, internalized
If
one
statistical trait is
not
are brought to bear the weight of explanation. If
not sufficient,
it
must be because religion also matters:
“Part of the explanation of these deviations has already been pointed out; other characteristics and group affiliations such as
more salient in particular situations than high and economic position” (Lipset 1963:240).
religious belief are
or low social
But ior in
why
is
some
class important in
molding individual voting behav-
societies but not in others, during
Why
not during others?
some periods
do individuals sometimes vote on the
sometimes on the basis of confessional attach-
basis of class,
ments, sometimes because of loyalties to parties, and
at
because of the overwhelming charm of someone’s grin?
Why
Norwegians more French?
Why
but
are
likely to vote
times are
on the basis of class than the
Swedish workers more prone
to vote for the
Social Democratic Party today than they were sixty years ago?
These are not questions about individuals. For even vidual acts tend to coincide with individual traits, lar traits
become causes of
why do
if
indi-
particu-
individual acts? In nature, causes are
causes and no one can do anything to alter them. The causal struc-
ety
is
people
not.
world
is
given, but the causal structure of soci-
The causes of
individual behavior are produced by
ture of the natural
in interaction
with one another.
Reduction does not suffice as an explanation because the causal path from individual traits to individual acts passes through the totality of social relations.
Gramsci put
it,
“is the final
(1971:193). This
is
“The counting of
ceremony of
'
‘votes’,” as
a long process.
...” j
images of society, of
a process of creating
j
forging collective identities, of mobilizing
commitments
to partic-
j
ular projects for the future. Class, religion, ethnicity, race, or |
nation
do not happen spontaneously
as reflections of objective |
conditions in
the psyches of individuals. Collective identity,
group solidarity, and
political
commitment
are continually trans-
j
^
Prologue
8
formed
— shaped,
destroyed, and molded
conflicts in the course of
which
anew
—
as a result of
political parties, schools, unions,
churches, newspapers, armies, and corporations strive to impose a particular relation
form of organization upon the
of society. The
life
between places occupied by individuals
their acts
is
a contingent historical
front interests
and images,
outcome of struggles
that involve preferences
and defeats. The
that bring victories
political
and
in society
that con-
and strategies,
behavior of indi-
viduals can be understood only in concrete historical articulation
with these conflicts acts
when
they are
—
particular traits
become causes of individual
embedded within
a definite structure that has
been imposed upon
political
relations
at
a given
moment
in
history.
The organization of There
is
politics in terms
nothing inherent
history that
would make
in
of class
is
not inevitable.
capitalism and nothing in the logic of
the
emergence of classes
as collective
subjects inexorable. Class position structures daily experience,
generates a certain kind of knowledge, terests,
endows people with
and may even evoke an understanding of a shared
feeling of solidarity. But this experience
in-
lot, a
need not become collec-
As Marx said and Gramsci was fond of repeating, individuals become conscious of social relations in the realm of ideology, people become aware of conflicts of interests tivized as
one of
at the level
class.
of ideology. “It
is
not the simple existence of op-
pressive conditions,” Michels points out, “but tion
it
of these conditions by the oppressed, which
is
the recogni-
in the
course of
history constituted the prime factor of class struggle” (1962:228).
Class relations are not transparent at the level of the “immediate”
(Gramsci), the “lived” (Althusser 1971) experience
ence which
ence
may
is
simply a reflection on everyday
life.
—
the experi-
This experi-
be one of poverty, of compulsion, of inequality, of
oppression.
It
may
be one of similarity. But
is
not an experience
solidarity, as
Olson (1971) has
it
of class.
Even
similarity
need not breed
shown. Indeed, Marx and Engels noted ifesto that
in the
Communist Man-
“the organization of proletariat into a class, and conse-
quently into a political party,
is
continually being upset by the
among workers themselves” similar situation and who have
who
competition
(1967: 144). People
are in a
identical interests often
find themselves in competition with
one another.
Prologue
9
Thus
the division of society into classes does not necessarily
result in the organization of politics in
terms of class. The “sys-
tem of interests” need not become the “system of solidarities” (Pizzomo 1966). “The simple objective conditions of producers,” Sartre emphasized,
“defines the concrete
man
—
his
needs, his vital problems, the orientation of his thought, the nature of his relationships with others:
belonging to a class” (1958:96). Nor as Sartre supposed, since
it
is
does not determine his
it
is this
experience as simple
not the only objective experience.
“objective” means experience that
is
inherited
by individuals and
independent of their will, then being a Catholic jective experience, as
woman
is
being a black
in the
If
in Italy is
an ob-
United States, or a
The people who perpetuate their existence by selling their capacity to work are also men or women. Catholics or Protestants, Northerners or Southerners. They are consumers, taxpayers, parents, and city dwellers. They may be mobilized into politics as workers, but they may also become Catholic in Switzerland.
workers. Catholics, or Bavarian Catholics. Hence,
we have
wealth of information
Our
way
of the
today about patterns of individual
voting, the explanatory question remains open:
vote the
in spite
why do
people
they do?
central thesis
is
that the voting behavior of individuals
More
an effect of the activities of political parties.
is
precisely, the
relative salience of class as a determinant of individual voting
behavior
is
a cumulative consequence of the strategies pursued by
political parties
of the Left. Hence,
not of voters, that
nomic and
is
this is a
study of voting, but
predicated on a theory of the system of eco-
political organization
under which
political parties de-
velop their strategies and individuals cast their votes.
The organization of
politics in terms of class
tingent result of conflicts in the course of
is
always a con-
which multiple
political
forces strive to maintain or to alter existing social relations.
Along
with other organizations, political parties forge collective identities, instill
commitments, define the
collective actions
and deny them.
Is
interests
on behalf of which
become possible, offer choices to individuals society composed of classes or individuals with
harmonious interests? Are class relations the fundamental social conflicts or are they subordinate to
What
are the classes?
Are
some
line
of
other divisions?
class interests antagonistic or
do they
encourage cooperation? Which classes represent interests more
l4.
/
I Electoral Participation
and
Its
Consequences we do pretender’s sham
Republicans before everything,
not indulge the crazy
idea of appealing to a
prestige or a dictator’s
sword
to secure the
universal suffrage.
triumph of our doctrine. It
is
the voter
We
whom we
appeal only to
want
to set eco-
nomically and politically free.
Alexandre Millerand,
in
1902
The Decision to Participate The
crucial choice
was whether or not
to participate.
Earlier
events resulted in establishing the principle of democracy in the political realm.
Yet
political rights
were merely formal when ac-
companied by the compulsion and inequality that reigned in the social realm. As it emerged around 1850, socialism was thus a
movement
would complete the revolution started by the bourgeoisie by wresting from it social power just as the bourgeoisie had conquered political power. The recurrent theme of the socialist
that
movement ever
since has been this notion of extending the
democratic principle from the political to the social,
in effect pri-
marily economic, realm.
Yet precisely because the principle of democracy was already
means by which socialism choice. The project of the early,
present in the political institutions, the
could be achieved appeared as a
communitarian a
socialists
was
to build a society within the society,
community of immediate producers associated
in
workshops
and manufactures, cooperating as consumers and administering their
own
affairs.
This society of associated producers was to be
Portions of this chapter
1980)
in a
somewhat
first
appeared
different form.
in the
New
Left Review, no. 122 (July
Electoral Participation
16
He wrote
one.
who
Its
Consequences
1879 that “a historical development can only
in
remain ‘peaceful’ so long as those
and
wield power
it
in
is
not opposed by the violence of
society
time” (McLellan
that
at
1971:201).
Thus,
the
essential
question
facing
whether, as Hjalmar Branting posed
it
its
it
was
parties
1886, ‘‘the upper class
in
[would] respect popular will even when
of
socialist
demanded
the abolition
privileges'" (Tingsten 1973:361). Sterky, the leader of the
wing of the Swedish Social Democrats, was among those who took a clearly negative view. ‘‘Suppose that ... the working left
class could send a majority to the legislature; not
even by doing
would it obtain power. One can be sure that the capitalist class would then take care not to continue along a parliamentary this
No
course but instead resort to bayonets” (Tingsten 1973:361).
one could be completely certain. Austrian Socialists, for example,
promised
in their
Linz program of 1926 to ‘‘govern
in strict accor-
dance with the rules of the democratic state,” but they pelled
warn
to
‘‘should
that
the
bourgeoisie
felt
com-
by boycotting
revolutionary forces attempt to obstruct the social change which the labour
movement
in
assuming power
then social democracy will be forced to to
pledged to carry out,
is
employ
means
dictatorial
break such resistance” (Leser 1976:145). The main doubt
about electoral participation was whether revolution would not be necessary anyway, as August Bebel put
it
in
1905, ‘‘as a purely
defensive measure, designed to safeguard the exercise of power legitimately acquired through the ballot” (Schorske 1972:43).
Under these conditions the attitude toward electoral participation was understandably cautious. Socialists entered electoral politics gingerly, ‘‘only to utilize them for propaganda purposes,” and vowed ‘‘not to enter any alliances with other parties or accept any
of the
SPD
compromises” (Resolution of in
1870). At best,
was one instrument among
many
the Eisenach Congress
thought, universal suffrage
others, albeit
one
that
had
‘‘the
incom-
parably higher merit of unchaining the class struggle,” as put
it
in
to
1850 (1952:47). Elections were
to
Marx
be used only as a
ready-made forum for organization, agitation, and propaganda.
The
typical posture
is
well illustrated by this motion offered in
1889: ‘‘Since Sweden’s Social Democratic Workers’ Party
propaganda party,
i.e.,
it
considers
its
main objective
to
is
a
be the
dissemination of information about Social Democracy, and since
The Decision
participation in elections
recommends
gress
17
to Participate
were also useful
is
a
good vehicle
for agitation, the
participation” (Tingsten 1973:357). Elections
providing party leadership with a reading of
in
the revolutionary fervor of the masses. But this to
promise
The
last
the State in
at the
moment when
edition of
socialists
is all
they seemed
decided to participate.
The Origins of Private Property, Family, and
which appeared during Engels’ lifetime
1891 the assertion that universal suffrage
of the maturity of the working class.
anything more
Con-
in the
is
still
contained
merely “the gauge
cannot and never will be
It
present-day state”
(
1942: 158) and continued
somewhat ambivalently, “but that is sufficient.” Each step toward full participation rekindled controversies. The German Social Democratic Party argued whether to allow one of its members to become the Deputy Speaker of the Reichstag, whether to vote on the budget, even whether to trade votes in the second round of elections (Schorske 1972).
wegian Labor Party refused round
even
though
in
1906
absolutely
The Nor-
to trade votes in the
second
no compromise was implied
(Lafferty 1971:127). In 1898, a survey of the opinions of promi-
nent leaders of the Second International
showed
that while inter-
ventions into bourgeois politics were thought to be
at
times
advisable, six of the respondents voted 'famais'' with regard to participating in a government, eleven admitted
it
was possible
only "dres exceptionnellement,'’'' and a minority of twelve thought that
such participation
in the
is
either always desirable or at least
case of Millerand (Fiechtier 1965:69-75).
Of the
it
was
sixty-nine
Swedish Social Democrats polled by telegram whether the party should join the Liberal government against participating (Tingsten
“suspended”
class struggle
ject of intense
first
1973:418). While
and entered
ments before the end of World decision to form the
1911, sixty-three responded
in
War
I,
parties
into coalition govern-
even
Labour government
in
Great Britain the
in
1924 was a sub-
polemics and was rationalized as an opportunity to
acquire experience necessary for the socialist era
Opponents of participation seem the political spectrum.
ward
some
full participation,
tion according to
to hold a
(Lyman
1957).
permanent place
in
As established parties take each step tonew voices emerge to continue the tradi-
which the belief
in the
parliamentary battles
“between frogs and mice” (Luxemburg 1967:37) is simply a manifestation of what Marx called under very special circum-
Electoral Participation
18
and
Its
Consequences
\
*
stances “parliamentary cretinism” (1952:77). “Integration
is
the
price,” Horkheimer repeated in 1940 in the anarchist memento,
“which individuals and groups must pay
in
order to flourish un-
der capitalism” (1973:5). “Elections, a trap for fools,” was the title
of an article by Sartre on the eve of the 1973 French parlia-
mentary elections. '"Voter, c'est abdiquer" shouted the walls of Paris in 1968.
Electoral Participation and Class Organization The
rea
^ why
involvement
in representative politics
geois society has never ceased to evoke controversy
is
of bo urthat th e
very'JELoOaEngpart in this particular sy;stem_shapes jhe„iT)LQvement for socialism and its relation to workers as a class. The recurrent qu estion is whpjhpr invplvpmpnf in elect oral politics c an result in socialism or
italist,~'^iaL-or([er find a passage
m ust
Is
if
strengthen the existing, that
is,
cap-
possible for the socialist movernent to
between the two reefs charted by Rosa Luxemburg:
“abandonment of the mass character or abandonment of the final goals?” (Howard 1973-74:93). Participation in electoral politics is necessary if the movement for socialism is to find mass support
among workers,
yet this participation appears to obstruct the at-
tainment of final goals. Working for today and working toward
tomorrow appear argue, as E. H.
as horns of a
Tawney
dilemma
to
many
observers
who
did about Labour, that the “Party can be
either a political agent, pressing in the Parliament the claims of
wage earners or it can be an instrument for the establishment of a socialist commonwealth. What it cannot be is both at the same time and in the same measure” (1923). particular groups of
Participation imprints a particular structure on the organizat ion
of worLei:s.asL.a .class. TRese effects class relations have
is
internal
economic struggle and
but an artificial product, even
standable, of the parliamentary period.
peaceful development,
economic struggle
upon
been best analyzed by Luxemburg: “the divi-
sion between political struggle and
separation
participation
is
On
if
their
historically under-
the
one hand,
in the
‘normal’ for the bourgeois society, the
fractionalized, disaggregated into a multi-
tude of partial struggles limited to each firm, to each branch of
production.
On
the other hand, the political struggle
is
conducted
not by the masses through direct action, but in conformity with
Electoral Participation and Class Organization
19
the structure of the bourgeois state, in the representative fashion,
by the pressure exercised upon the legislative body” (1970:202).
The first effect of the structure of the bourgeois state is thus that wage earners are formed as a class in a number of independent and often competitive organizations, most frequently as trade
unions and political parties, but also as cooperatives, neigh-
borhood associations, clubs, capitalist
democracy
is
the realms of politics
and ideology (Lukacs 1971:65-66; Poul-
the system of production
are capitalists or
all
appear
Hence, even
individuals-citizens.
characteristic feature of
the individualization of class relations in
who
antzas 1973). People
One
etc.
if
wage
earners within
in politics as undifferentiated
a political party succeeds in
organizing a class on the terrain of political institutions, economic
and
need not coincide. Multiple unions and
political organization
riini.M
'
parties_Qften represent different interests and compete with each
Moreover,
other.
while the
cl a ss
base of unions
is
confined to
more or less permanently emp InypH wage e arners, pol itical parties which or ganize workers can als mohi li7p..pmp]e who r^^nnot be member s of union s. HenceJh^
certain groups of people
is
jL perrnaiiept trni&ioxiJj^tweealhe
narrow er int£r^ts of unions
and th^ htundar infprpll/~i
od O'
u o
q d o
q "3
A
o
3 3 C 3
3 c «
m
3 c 3
Urn
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od O'
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t-
2 > c o
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u
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oi
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—
3 3 C 3
00 od m
3 3 C 3 ••—1
q q q —L d d 00 o O'
00 ri oo rn
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rn
ri
q q 3-
d
rod
q 3"
—
oa
7Z Oil k.
o ^5 ^/5
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u o u
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q q (N d oo o d
oo nO r
00
o
c 3 >N 3
E 3 C
c/5
k«
.
,
O' C P 3 0 P ’3 x: P
di
3 c P k.
>>
P
X 0 O'
rn mi a^ o^ O'
0
0
sO
X
0
k.
3
)
c/3
C P 0
c/3
c/3
00 r-
X X E 00 VM
-
c
CO :d
c
:£>
.B-
3 E
Cl c/3
> Ck> P (U 0 > m > 0
P X p c E 3 p U p r-C E
0
o c o -3
P > o
"Jo
>>
c/5
^3
c/5
p p P 'C
3
3 3
'w k.
c/5
T3
C
_3
c p p
P
-o
o
X X>3 Q Q c m cp 2 > T3 3 c c 00 O m o
*C
_3
cu
O'
CQ
CU
a
p
'C Cu od •3
'3
o C
c/5
o c
p p
CO'
k>
C 3
X
d)
Xa. u>
c x'
c 3
O p 3 3 O P
P E
>1 X!
0 oc
•3
>
ON
that k
—
would
like to
maintain
composition they seek to achieve.
that the party
N(t) and kW(t)
indicates the class
>
N(t)
is
If
supported by a sufficient
N(t)/W(t), and as a consequence
>
0, then leaders will be free to
pursue a supraclass strategy and recruit more non workers. The
and thus
it
can afford to
dedicate itself to the middle-class electorate. But
if
there are not
party
is
sufficiently working-class based
enough workers or too many so that k
oi
oi
kO
UJ
o f3
c.
u
y) •V
OfJ
OC
c
^ —
—
k c 70 r3 3 '3: O c o .2 2 'o 3 c o C a. y)
Class-only
;/3
o
34 34
3-
k.
o
00
o.
with
OO
>3>
o
(3 3" 3) 34 3" 13) 0 O' 00 »3) O' f3
—
O —
»3)
OO 3" 34 '0 3’
—
y)
3 — o K 3 c o O O O x: (u o y)
(U
•S y)
•-
Comparison
Cl, 045
y)
i2
O o
3.1E-S S S
u .X
4.2
•2 Table
^ 1>
OQ
C >> c 3 o 3 o (U c o •o B _3 c
1.
This
not a surprise
is
—
for
each additional middle-class voter, the party loses {dip) workingclass voters in equilibrium.
Thus
if
dip
>
the party loses net
1,
votes by turning for support to the non workers. But off
struc-
as the ratio of
to allies in the electorate is larger than the trade-off,
dip, the party
trade-off
is
is
best off pursuing a class-only strategy
steeper than
the trade-off
and
if
dle-class voters
even
if
there are
party strategies
recruiting allies, the party if
if
the
and best off with a supraclass strategy
milder. But
is
the electorate
1
XIL
may
more allies than workers are somewhat effective
if
in in
be electorally best off to seek mid-
the trade-off
is
very steep.
Table 4.2 shows carrying capacities associated with the
strat-
egies that best reconstruct the actual experience of socialist voting
compared with
would have resulted from the pure supraclass and the pure class-only strategies. These numbers indicate what proportions of the electorate each major socialist party or the left-wing parties together would be able to recruit and hold if the class structure were frozen at its 1970 levels. The column associated with the “full supraclass strategy” indicates whether the party would maximize its vote share if it pursued a strategy of mobilization of nonworkers independently of support from workers. Since such a strategy would alter the the carrying capacities that
logic of socialist electoral competition, cific
numbers
we
to identify the potential pool
hesitate to provide spe-
of nonworker socialist
support. Orders of magnitude are sufficient, however, to this strategy
with the supraclass posture
allies is limited
ever a
egy
“max”
that
in
compare
which mobilization of
by the success of the party among workers. Wherappears in the “full supraclass” column, the
would involve a complete abandonment of
strat-
class
is
Was
the Stagnation of the Socialist
Vote Inevitable?
1
electorally superior both to the limited supraclass strategy
and
13
to
The remaining columns in this table indicate composition that would characterize the partic-
class-only strategy. the resulting class ular strategies
—
the actual strategy and the pure ones. Instead of
presenting the values of
k,
however, we have translated these
val-
ues into proportions indicating
how many workers would
found among party supporters
the party adopted the particular
if
be
strategy.
The Finnish, French, and
the pre-1933
parties faced an equilibrium trade-off ty, as
German major
socialist
which was steeper than
uni-
did the Left as a whole in Belgium, France, and Germany.
The Finnish Left faced
a milder trade-off, but workers constituted
only about 19 percent of the Finnish electorate in 1970. In these cases the unlimited supraclass strategy
is
all
best electorally. In
where the trade-off is steep, the pure class-only strategy is second best and the supraclass strategy which limits the recruitment of allies on the success among workers is the worst. These
the cases
parties thus faced a bifurcation in their road to
abandon
all
was the worst from the one
in
to
to decide
concerns with class or alternatively to struggle to
keep the party class pure. whether
— they had
A
half-hearted middle-class orientation
They had to decide would be no workers or
electoral point of view.
have a party
in
which there
which there would be only workers.
Denmark, Norway, and Sweden the limited supraclass strategy would maximize the vote. The Left as a whole and the major socialist parties in these countries would get most votes by turning In
for support to
nonworkers and they could get
retain a sizable support
among workers. They
or-nothing choice as far as class
is
support and
still
did not face an
all-
this
concerned. They would have to
which workers were a minority, but they could choose continuously between having more workers and fewer votes or fewer workers and more votes. In all these cases the pool of the potential middle-class supporters was, by 1970, tolerate electorates in
larger than the proportion of
workers
in the electorate.
Thus, the
pure class-only strategy was electorally the worst.
Was the Stagnation of the
Socialist
Vote Inevitable?
Within the realm of available choice, leaders of left-wing parties disappoint those
who
believe that their exclusive concern
should be, to maximize the vote.
Among
the parties
is,
or
which would
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
114
maximize their vote share by abandoning workers altogether, none has accepted this option. This is not surprising given all we know about the view of the future with which socialist leaders analyzed their choices eighty years ago. Most of them certainly
would require abandoning the altogether would eventually be the one that would win
did not expect that the strategy that proletariat
most votes. Bernstein had the correct
the
seen, there
was
in fact little
this strategy,
we have
empirical support for his arguments.
There were many more reasons have adopted
intuition but, as
why
and the
socialist leaders
could not
fact that they did not
not be taken as the evidence that they did not want to
should
maximize
their future votes.
But the evidence against pure vote maximizing goes further.
SPD
our numbers can be believed, only the pre-1933 the second best,
they could.
The
by keeping the party as pure leaders of the Finnish Social
in
If
leaders did
terms of class as
Democrats had
little
choice and placed themselves somewhat closer to their better strategy, again the class-pure one.
der consideration, that to
is,
until
At
least
during the period un-
1970, the French Socialists seem
have chosen almost the worst electoral strategy. They
tried to
conquer middle-class voters without losing workers and did not succeed
in either.
SPD, placed strategy,
egy
is
Left,
which includes the post-war
again exactly halfway between the second best
which would have been class pure and the worst strategy
which turned
The
itself
The German
in a
halfhearted
way toward
three Scandinavian parties for
electorally superior,
by quite
a
the middle classes.
which the supraclass
wide margin
in
strat-
Norway and
Denmark, nevertheless have opted to pursue strategies that have kept them closer to their working-class base. To maximize votes, the Danish Social Democrats would have to tolerate an electoral support in which workers would have constituted 41 .4 percent. In the light of our calculations, they have opted for a class
composi-
—
which workers would make up 72.5 percent a strategic decision which placed them closer to the electorally inferior classtion in
only strategy. The Norwegians would have maximized their share of the vote with an electoral base in which workers would constitute
29.4 percent; they have opted for one
in
which workers
would make up 47.3 percent. Finally, the Swedes would have been electorally best off by bringing the workers share in their electoral support to 20.6 percent. Instead, they chose to compete
Was
the Stagnation of the Socialist
Vote Inevitable?
1
15
with a party of which 77.6 percent of the electoral support would
be from workers. All these parties did
embark on
strategies designed to recruit the
middle classes. Danes turned for support of peasants as early as 1888 and always kept the party open to nonworkers. Swedes made their first deliberate
working class
to
extend the electorate beyond the
1911 and formalized this
in
wegians began
move
same way
in the
move
1921. Nor-
in
as the Danes, then adopted a
working-class posture, but by 1933 joined the other two parties turning to “the people” (Martin 1972:48).
decided to turn to office employees in the
wage
embarked on
the
indicates that
none of these
in
The Swedish party late 1950s, when it
earners’ solidarity policy. Yet our analysis parties has
gone even half of the way
Even the Norwegian Labour Party, which was willing to tolerate more middle- than working-class supporters in its electorate, could have gained by becoming more supraclass oriented. they could have to recruit the middle classes.
At
this
time
we must
return to the causes of the stagnation of
we drew from the analysis one hand, we argued that the
the socialist vote, for the conclusions
of trade-offs are implausible.
On
the
social democratic parties faced a relatively mild trade-off in the
three Scandinavian countries because the trade unions played an
we
important role in organizing workers as a class. But over, on the other hand,
showing
might have been seen as
that these parties are quite free
from any attachment strategies.
values of the criterion of class composition,
ties
k,
The
to
actu-
with which par-
chose strategies, were higher for the Danish and Norwegian
Left and for the Social it
that
working class when they choose electoral
the al
numbers
passed
Democrats than
might have seemed as
their
if
the
Thus Scandinavian Left benefited from for the other parties.
symbiotic relation with the unions without being
strained
by them. This would have been the best of
at all
all
con-
possible
worlds.
We
see
that social
now, having analyzed democratic leaders
which were
in fact far
point of view. In
the alternatives that
in these countries
were open,
pursued strategies
from optimal from the purely electoral
Denmark, Norway, and Sweden,
the Social
Democrats could have permanently conquered a majority of the electorate
won
—
all
those
who had
elections with an
the right to vote
overwhelming majority
— and repeatedly if
they had only
1
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
16
embarked from
the beginning and persevered unswervingly in a
would distance them permanently from workers as a class. Just examine figure 4.2 which compares the share of the vote the Danish and the Swedish Social Democrats could have obtained with the actual historical record of strategy of electoral recruitment that
their electoral
performance.
the Danes, nor the
And
yet neither the Norwegians, nor
Swedes did pursue
would have been most successful
in
the course of action that
winning elections
at the cost
of abandoning the working class.
The reason why these parties could have made this much of a difference by following supraclass strategies is that they faced relatively mild trade-offs
emphasis on class
ior
would have had
they diluted the
organization and propaganda. But the
in their
reason, at least in part, parties
among workers when
why
the
relatively
abandonment of class by these little effect on the voting behav-
of workers was that workers were organized as a class by
large, concentrated,
and centralized unions.
closes rather viciously, for
it is
pendence with the unions
Democrats
that Social
all
the unions. Indeed, before
here the circle
precisely because of their interde-
Norway, and Sweden could not adopt maximized their vote. Since their foundation,
And
strategies that
three parties
Denmark, would have
in
were closely related
1900 the two organizations were
most indistinguishable, particularly
at the local level.
al-
While the
Danish party had already abolished collective membership
Norway and particularly in Sweden the of union members in the party continued
to
in the
mem-
1870s, in
collective
bership
to be important.
membership of the Norwegian Labour Party and 73 percent of the Swedish SAP consisted of union members affiliated collectively. Unions provided, however, not only members but also finances for electoral campaigns. The leadership of the unions and parties often overlapped, and in Denmark several union leaders became Social Democratic prime min-
As of 1974, 40 percent of
isters (see
the
Elvander 1979; Esping-Anderson 1985).
Unions are necessarily class organizations, this term.
Their potential membership
terms; unions are not and cannot
is
in
two senses of
defined only
in class
become organizations of Catho-
women, or citizens; they can associate only workers or at most wage earners. Hence their constituency is necessarily more lics,
restricted than that of electoral parties for
whom
the ultimate pool
8Z61 ez6i 0Z61 8961 t^96l
0961 8961 9961 2961 8t^6l
pm 0r6l 9861 2C61 8261
-
o »— u
Sweden
and
1^261 Denmark
1261
0261 Zl6l
in
^161 t^l6l I
Parties
161
Democratic
Social
of
Shares
Vote
Actual
O'
and
< Possible
o hu
4.2
Figure
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
118
of support consists simply of citizens, whoever they
may
be other-
wise.
But perhaps more importantly unions are organizations
whose
principal task
is
to protect their
members from competition
with one another; to prevent workers from bidding their wages
down
in
exchange
for
employment. And
this
means
union
that the
organization constitutes a collective good only for those people
who may conceivably
find themselves in competition for the
same
kinds of employment, not for everyone. Thus unions represent interests
narrower than those that can be organized by
political
parties.
The
trade unions in Scandinavia often resisted the adoption of
supraclass strategies (Hentila 1978:331-32; Scase 1977:323; El-
vander 1979:18). Heidar reported (1977:300) that there
were “strong counterforces
the ‘organic’ link the trade union
to this process of
between party and
movement which
vote.’’
breakdown
in is
a potent force in resisting
mandate
for the working-class
Martin (1972:15, 168ff) showed that most leaders of the
Norwegian Labour Party had thought its
were
to
would have had
to
that if the party
actively pursue the white-collar electorate
weaken
Norway
class. In the forefront here
is still
the trend towards a purer political
in
it
organizational ties to the trade unions, specifically, to
abolish collective affiliation.
Belgium, Finland, France, and
at least the
pre-1933 Germany,
on the one hand, and Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, on the other hand, constitute two different types of situations. In the
first
group
of countries unions did not remove the burden of organizing workers as a class
from the shoulders of
political parties.
They did
not
play this role because they were apolitical, or because they were politically fractionalized, or
because they were organizationally
decentralized, but they could not and did not. class ideology
The
result
was
that
and class organization were highly vulnerable
socialist electoral strategies.
The
electoral trade-off the left
to
wing
was so steep that any major turn for support to the middle classes would have been disastrous for their vote-getting power. The best the Left could have done from the purely electoral point of view was indeed to abandon the working-class electorate altogether, but that option was not feasible for reasons of ideology as well as for fear that the union movement would become completely independent and apolitical parties encountered in these countries
(Schorske 1972;
Gay 1970:136-37;
Fiechtier 1965:148-52). In-
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
deed
in
1925 when the
SPD
1
19
drafted a program which asserted that
“the struggle of the working class against capitalist exploitation
is
necessarily a political struggle,” party leaders were soon taught by the
ADGB
that
it
is
“not only an economic one, but also neces-
sarily a political struggle”
best option
—
(Hunt 1970:175-76).
a pristinely ouvrierist stance
— was
win majorities and mandates because the
to
“great industry” turned out to be socialists
much
And
the second
good enough development of the not
less labor-intensive than
had expected and workers never became the majority.
The Danes, Norwegians, and Swedes were in a different predicament. The trade unions in these countries grew rapidly and uni-
became institutionalized by a bargaining system. As a result. Social Dem-
fied at an early stage. Class relations
nationwide collective
ocrats in these countries could pursue middle-class oriented strat-
egies at a tolerable or even negligible cost. But that very
same
partner which took from the parties most of the burden of organizing workers as a class
imposed constraints on
the degree to
which
these parties could freely pursue their electoral opportunities.
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers? The interdependence between socialist parties and trade unions is not the sole constraint which binds strategic alternatives. Internal relations within each party are likely to provide another con-
members may have preferences distinct from party leaders and leaders may be unable to wage campaigns which do not have the support of members. Many people become party acstraint.
tivists
tants
Party
because they have strong beliefs about issues and such mili-
may
be unwilling to follow the leaders
in
an opportunistic
pursuit of votes. Unfortunately, while Schorske’s (1972) study of
SPD between
the
1905 and 1917 highlighted the tension between
party leaders and the rank and
file,
we could
not find direct evi-
dence of members’ resistance to leaders’ electoral strategies.
We
remain persuaded, nevertheless, that internal relations within the party
must
restrict the strategic
Thus the issue
is
freedom of the leadership.
not whether leaders of electoral parties seek to
maximize the vote or follow ideologies. Leaders of
electoral par-
win more votes rather than fewer: this we do not doubt. The question is under what constraints they maximize votes, and the issue may be at most whether there is any room for ties
prefer to
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
120
choice
left after all
constraints, to
the constraints are considered.
assume
To
ignore such
can pick any strategy,
that party leaders
address themselves to any group with any program, reduces the
To conclude
study of parties and elections to empty formalisms. that party leaders
who do
maximize must be victims of
not
the
how many obstacles stand in the way of those who would very much like to win elections. One of these obstacles is intertemporal. Once we look at party strategies in historical perspective, as a process, we cannot view irrationalism of ideology
is
to forget
each election as an event that had no antecedents and would have
no subsequent consequences.
We
must understand how the past
choices have shaped the current alternatives, and
how
far into the future party leaders look
when
we must
ask
they examine the
eventual consequences of their strategic choices.
The
analysis of long-term consequences placed an unfair bur-
den on party leaders. The question
we asked above was whether
leaders of left-wing parties sought to
long run, trying to get as
from now
elections,
many
ologues were able to think
in
the vote in the
votes as possible in
all
future
But while the Catholic Church
to eternity.
perhaps able to see the future
maximize
in
millennia and
centuries,
it
is
Communist
is
ide-
unreasonable to ex-
much attention to anything who maximize for the long
pect leaders of electoral parties to pay but the proximate future. Politicians
run end up writing
We
politicians. to
win
all
memoirs within
a very short one, even socialist
should ask, therefore, whether party leaders tried
the votes they could in the proximate elections, re-
gardless of the consequences the particular strategy might have for the longer run.
Two
parties are particularly interesting since they represent the
clearest contrast, although each
same
situation.
The Swedish
is
representative of others in the
Social Democrats, as well as the
Danish Social Democrats and the Norwegian Labour Party, could have improved voting performance by adopting a strategy that
The French Socialists, as well as the Social Democrats in pre-1933 Germany, were in a situation in which their best strategy was to break all ties with the working class. Their second best strategy, however, was would distance them further from the working
to
maintain the electorate pristinely pure
SPD
did
all
it
could
in this direction.
in
class.
terms of class, and the
But the French Socialist
Party adopted a strategy of mixing appeals to workers with the
Arc Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
121
organization of the middle classes and the effect was quite suboptimal electorally.
These were the conclusions of the analysis of long-run maximizing. But the consequences of the different conditions these
two
parties faced during their electoral histories manifest
them-
shows what would have been the consequences if the French Socialists and the Swedish Social Democrats chose, at any moment, either of the pure stratselves also in the short run. Figure 4.3
egies and followed this strategy during just tions.
The
point of origin
—
the bigger dots
two consecutive
—
at
elec-
each election time
represents the vote share which the party had actually obtained.
The two
which originate from each point represent the vote party would have obtained had it adopted at the time the
lines
shares the
pure supraclass and the pure class-only strategy. For example, the
French Socialist Party
won
10.1 percent of the electorate in the
1962 elections. Had the Socialists adopted
at this
moment
the
pure supraclass strategy, they would have gained 15.5 percent in the 1967 elections.
Had
they persevered with the
1968 elections, they would have
for the
percent of the electorate. In turn,
if
won
same
strategy
the votes of 8.9
the Socialists had opted for the
pure class-only strategy, they would have obtained 13.3 percent in
1967 and 13.5
The
in
1968.
analysis of alternatives available in the short run to the
leaders of the
Swedish Social Democratic Party confirms the con-
clusions derived from the long-run analysis. At each history. Social
Democrats would have improved
moment of
their electoral
performance by embracing a pure supraclass strategy. Until the
male suffrage, about 1905, the trade unions any opening on the part of the Social Democrats (Hentilla
battle for universal
resisted
1978:331-32). But having learned about the importance of liances, the party gingerly
changed the clause by which class to “all the first
gone the
was
full
would have won
it
its
ranks in
identified itself
when
1911,
far
way
in the
from a pure supraclass in
its
it
from the working
oppressed” (Tingsten 1973). Nevertheless,
strategic turn
party
opened
al-
strategy.
this
Had
the
appeal to the middle classes,
two successive elections of 1914
first
it
25.3
and then 32.9 percent of the electorate, instead of the 20.9 and 23.9 percent
it
did win. Since the party would have obtained 19.4
and 20.5 percent with the pure class-only strategy, the 1911 turn to the
middle classes seems halfhearted indeed. The quest for
30
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ELECTIONS
ELECTIONS
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
middle-class voters
had suffered their
was extended
in
123
1921 after Social Democrats
and formed the
electoral reversal
first
nority government. But again the strategy adopted in 1921
from the pure supraclass orientation
— unreserved
mi-
first
was
far
pursuit of the
middle-class electorate would have resulted in a share of 26.8 percent in 1924 and 32.7 percent in 1928, a pure working-class
would have brought 21.2 percent in 924 and 23.1 in 928 while in fact that party won 21.7 and 24.9 percent in these two elections. Even the wage-earner campaign of the late 1950s did stance
1
not constitute a vote maximizing strategy.
barked upon such a strategy
in
1958,
it
1
Had
the party
would have won 46.4
percent in 1960 and 51.9 percent in 1964. In fact, tively
em-
40.9 and 39.4 percent of the electorate,
it
still
won
respec-
closer to the
pure class-only and electorally inferior strategy which would have
brought 37.8 percent by 1960 and 36.8 percent by 1964. This analysis merely confirms, therefore, the conclusions derived from the examination of the strategies oriented toward long-
run objectives.
A
similar dissection of the behavior of the Danish
Democracy and the Norwegian Labour Party would have brought the same results. In these countries, as table 4.1 has alSocial
ready shown, there
which
is
is
no intertemporal trade-off between
that
best in the short and in the long run. Supraclass strategies
are electorally superior in the short run
more votes it would win. vote maximizing supraclass
perseveres the opt for the
and the longer a party If party leaders
strategies,
it
is
did not
because
they cared about the class orientation of the party, not only about votes.
The notion sake
is
that party leaders seek to
not only ad hoc, but
which everyone derives
utility
it
maximize votes
also conjures a strange world in
from consumption
become leaders of electoral parties Pizzomo 1983). Our evidence demonstrates
they
cialist parties
Figure 4.3
for votes’
until
and unless
(Hirschleifer that
1976;
even when so-
could indefinitely increase their vote shares by mov-
The Choices Facing French
The dots represent
Socialists
and Swedish Social Democrats
The lines originating from them at party would have obtained had it fol-
the estimated vote share.
each time represent the vote shares the
lowed pure strategies during the two next elections. Vote shares as a proportion of the electorate.
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
124
ing
away from
their working-class roots, socialist leaders
had
other reasons to care about the class orientation of their parties.
Hence our analysis joins
port the assumption that party leaders ity
rather than votes (see
Votes are worth only as
The French Note
socialists
Wittman 1983,
much
moving toward
moment of
effects if
it
lasted
Communist
its
mandates they embody. tighter spot.
became
in the
The next
have suffered two elections
elections. Until 1924, before
inferior after
later the loss
to the result they
Had
perverse
a serious contender, the limited su-
was only mildly
pure class-only strategy.
elections.
move would have had
two consecutive
compared
two
the middle-class electorate, but during
chosen the pure supraclass strategy
electorate as
much
in a
performance
electoral
history such a
Party
praclass strategy Socialists
the expected util-
for a recent review).
electorally inferior within the span of
election by
the
as the
always have been
party could always improve
every
maximize
4.3 that the limited supraclass strategy invariably
in figure
became
which sup-
the line of empirical findings
they
made
two
in
elections.
Had
1902, they would
of 1.5 percent of the
would have had with a
this
choice
1906, after
in
would have foresaken 2.3 percent two elecby 1914. But after the Tour Congress, the cost of the
the unification, they tions later, flirtation
with the middle class increased.
If Socialists
had opted
would have received by 1924 almost 4 percent less than would have resulted from a pristinely ouvrierist stance. These costs continued to be high during the interwar period, but the difference between the result of the two pure strategies decreased after 1945. Only in 1968 did the strategic choice made two elections earlier, in 1962, matter: the difference was 4.6 percent of the electorate. And in 1978 the decifor the pure supraclass strategy in 1914, they
sions
made
in
1968 could make a difference of 3.2 percent of the
electorate.
While the two world wars roughly mark the periods tegic choices of the
French
in the stra-
socialists, the intertemporal trade-off
was present during their entire electoral history. After two elections socialists would have always won more votes had they pursued working-class oriented strategies. But for the next election the supraclass strategy
was always
superior, and often
by a sizable
chunk of the electorate. In 1902 socialists could have looked forward to winning in the next election 5.5 percent more with the pure supraclass than with the pure class-only strategy; indeed they
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
could have
won
5 percent
125
more than they did
probably not the time, however, to
flirt
was
1906. This
in
with the middle classes
since the pressing issues concerned the unity of the socialists
themselves and their relation to the trade union movement. Decid-
ed on
SFIO by 1924
—
which
made
1919, the pure supraclass strategy would have
in
far the
its
most important force
in the Cartel
des Gauches of
share of the electorate would have been 31.7 percent,
translates to almost
one half of the votes
cast.
Chosen
in
1936, the supraclass strategy would have resulted in a significant gain by 1945.
Chosen
in
1967,
it
would have prevented
the beat-
ing socialists received in 1968.
Thus
was always superior for class-only strategy was superior elec-
the limited supraclass strategy
the next election while the torally for
one election
later.
French
socialists
were caught be-
tween short-run maximization, which tempted them the middle classes
around 1890 and again
reduced them to a party of teachers
in the
to
flirt
with
1930s and which
1950s, and the longer-
in the
run superiority of the ouvrierist stance. During the interwar period, under pressure from the communists, the
SFIO maintained
a
working-class oriented stance and even expelled the main advocate of the supraclass strategy,
After the war, the party
Marcel Deat (Touchard 1977).
moved toward
the middle-class constitu-
ency and the electoral results were rather pathetic.
newly reconstructed electoral performance after
significant that the
improved
its
math of the 1977
split
It is
therefore
Socialist Party sharply it
decided, in the after-
with the PCF, to wrest
hegemony over
the
working class from the communists (Daniel 1978).
Thus where
in the
case of the French socialists, as well as the
strategies
SPD,
which maximize the vote for the next election
were electorally inferior soon afterwards,
it
is
just impossible to
speak of vote maximization ahistorically. The fiction of elections as a series of
unconnected events
is
no longer tenable.
cast in each election are indeed a cumulative strategies, then party leaders
If the
votes
consequence of past
cannot every few years begin history
would place it best electorally in a known distribution of public opinion. The assumption that public opinion is exogeneous to party strategies is absurd, whether one thinks that party leaders maximize votes (Downs 1957), substantive goals (Wittman 1973), or a mixture of anew, picking for
their parties the strategy that
both (Schlesinger 1975). Parties mold the ‘’public opinion”: they
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
126
present the public with images of society, evoke collective identi-
commitments. Thus the distribution of
fications, instill political
preferences parties encounter
Gramsci emphasized, which
each electoral campaign
in
a result
is,
as
of past actions; the conditions
parties encounter at the present are a product of strategies
they chose in the past.
And many
of today’s objective conditions
when
are the errors of yesterday. Therefore, strategies for the next election they
tions they will encounter
when
party leaders choose
must worry about the condi-
they will be making their future
strategic decisions.
The reason
the socialist vote stagnated after an initial burst of
growth, the reason socialist parties did not win the mandate of an
overwhelming majority of the electorate, is not that party leaders were blinded by their ideology to existing electoral opportunities.
The reason strained
is
that their choices
by class-structure
majority.
—
were constrained. They were con-
the fact that workers never
They were constrained
in
became
a
Belgium, Finland, France,
and Germany by the electoral trade-off they encountered
among
workers as they sought to win the votes of the middle classes.
They were constrained their
in
Denmark, Norway, and Sweden by
symbiotic relation with the organizations of workers as a
class, the trade unions.
They probably made
strategic mistakes.
People do make strategic mistakes and socialists did find cult to
it
diffi-
throw off the blinders imposed by the “scientific so-
cialism’’ of the
Second
when placed within
International.
But these mistakes pale
the context of constraints. Ultimately,
ably mattered relatively
little
whether
it
prob-
socialist leaders did every-
thing they could to win elections. Their choices were limited.
Appendix
to
Chapter 4
This appendix contains formal definitions and explanations of
some terms used assertions,
in the analysis,
proofs of the more important
and a discussion of alternative assumptions. Most of
the material involves only elementary conceptual
operations and should be accessible to anyone
who
and algebraic wishes to
in-
more deeply into the analysis. The only section which is mathematically more difficult is the last one, concerning maximi-
quire
zation.
Appendix
127
The order of this appendix does
We
not follow the
body of
the text.
begin by defining the pure strategies and proceed immediately
to the analysis
of the short tun. Only then limits are taken and the
Two
discussion concerns the carrying capacities.
presented subsequently to
els are
maximizing
mod-
the robustness of the re-
contains the proof of the assertion
sults. Finally, the last section
that vote
show
alternative
depend on the
strategies
intensity of the
equilibrium trade-off.
As
model
a reference, the
^W{^)
=
p[Xit
^Nit)
=
q[L(t
r(r)
The
=
-
1)
+
+
Wit)
+
1)
given by:
is
-
-
W(/)) N{t)\
+
N* = r*
=
N{t)], (4A.2)
(4A.3)
A^(/).
Appendix
to chapter 3):
(4A.4)
idlp)N*,
qLliq VT*
-
c[A'(/)W(/)
steady-state values are (see the
W* = X —
(4A.1)
dN(t),
+
+ ckW/iq +
c)
(4A.5)
c),
+ N*.
(4A.6)
Pure Strategies
A
pure supraclass strategy
in the
recruitment of
all
is
would
a course of action that
result
the allies in the next round of voting
party strategies were perfectly effective, that
if
is,
parties could
always get what they wanted. Thus a pure supraclass strategy time
t
is
Another way
+
1)
=
to write the
to recruit the
AA(r)
A
at
defined by a number kHt) such that
Nit
want
if
same
remaining
=
Lit
1)
when
1)
criterion
allies,
pure class-only strategy
maximize
+
L(/
=
c is
\
(4A.7)
.
that the party
or
—
A^(/),
is
a course of action that
when
c
=
the ratio of workers to socialist voters.
egy can be defined by a number
would
k^it)
which
is
(4A.8)
1.
Hence
would
this strat-
the solution to the
problem given as
max Wit + \)/[Wit + k
1)
+ Nit +
1)].
(4A.9)
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
128
Since
our model the only state the party can modify during the
in
next election
is
N{t
-I-
maximizing the
1),
socialist.
pure class-only strategy
+
Nit
which
or,
is still
Nit
state
+
by
=
is
=
c
(4A.10)
1,
when
=
c
1
(4A.
.
1
1
taken to be the strategic variable the
accessible at
party can influence only Wit
+
when
0,
—Nit),
that since k
1) is
such that
k^(t)
=
1)
to define the
the same.
AN{t)
Note again
Thus, the alternative way
is
in the
minimizing the proportion of non-
socialist vote is equivalent to
workers voting
of workers
ratio
t
+
but the state Wit
+
1) is not.
The
and indirectly, by affecting Nit
2),
Short-term consequences of our analysis are obviously sen-
1).
sitive to this lag structure but
To
calculate k^it)
longer term consequences are not.
we proceed
as follows:
first,
substitute the
=
objective (4A.8) as the left-hand side of (4A.2), setting c
ThenL(r +
-
1)
=
Nit)
q[Lit
+
1)
- A(0] +
[k^it)Wit)
-
1.
Nit)].
Solving for k^t) yields (1
-
kHt)
q)Lit
+
+
1)
qNit)
(4A.12)
Wit)
subject to the constraint that W^it
+
which eventually depends
2),
on k^t), be nonnegative. Analogously, tive
(4A.
1
1) in
-Nit) and solve for
=
can be obtained by substituting the objec-
k^it)
(4A.2), and setting c q[Lit
+
-
yV(0]
1
to obtain
+ mOWit) -
Nit)],
k^it):
kHt)
Any
1)
=
Lit
+
value of k such that kSit)
WU) 1)
0; otherwise, (limited mobilization of allies)
(pld)X(t),
or
if
X(r)
-
T
(full
1),
idlp)Lit
+
1)
1)
0,
otherwise
=
D*(/)
[1
-
{dlp)][{pld)X{t)
- QUt +
1)],
(limited mobilization)
or
D*(0 =
[Lit
+
1)
-
(full
Since
(1
— Q) =
ing capacities
c/ [c
when
+
X(t)]
-
[1
-
id/p)]QL(t
Xit)IL(t
— +
c)], the difference 1)
>
1)
(4A.33)
mobilization).
qi\
+
between carry-
0 equals the
limit
of the
difference between vote shares as given by (4A.20), assuming is
L
constant.
Would Different Assumptions Make Much Difference? In order to first
be able to answer some questions more generally,
we
introduced modifications of the model. These modifications
Are
134
Socialist
Leaders Vote Maximizers?
are intended to demonstrate that the conclusions presented in the
even
text are valid
if
the
model
reasonable objections that ular assumptions.
suppose
First,
was defined
We
will
may
be raised with regard to the partic-
work only with
that there
allies
it
as that part of socialist voting
may
socialist.
due
allies,
can be made that
We
did not
term q\L{t
to the
was defined
vote
all
allies
+
1)
which
are of
no
inde-
estimated
interest to us here;
the theoretical analyses.
—
is
The
the socialist vote
N{t)\ in (4A.2). Since this
as independent of party strategy, an it
is
are neither workers nor
which we are referring now
protest voting to
of
who
Such votes
indeed, they have been ignored in
by
in the statistically
also turn out that people
would vote
the steady states.
no protest voting. Protest voting
is
pendent of party strategies. Note that
model
accommodate some
altered to
is
argument
should not enter into the analysis of strategies.
remove
it
main body of
in the
the text because the
absolute magnitudes of socialist vote shares are politically impor-
Two
tant.
parties
may have
a range of choice of
one may be getting 25 percent
30 percent but protest vote and the other no
in
protest vote whatsoever. Their alternatives will be electorally the
same but
politically quite different,
were included
Note
anyway
in the analysis.
and
this is
why
But we could remove
protest votes it.
many cases the parameter q turned out to be zero the German and Norwegian Left and the Danish,
that in
—
for
French, and Norwegian socialist parties. In several other cases this
parameter
is
almost negligible. Hence, removing protest vote
from the analysis would not have made much of an empirical difference in most countries. But ical
let
us
first
examine some analyt-
consequences.
If
we
let
X/L
dlp\ otherwise
{plc{)X in the case of limited mobilization,
= L The carrying
in the
case of
and (4A.39)
mobilization.
full
capacities will be different, however,
when
the party
pursues pure class-only strategies. With no protest vote, the carrying capacity
among
and hold
workers, so that
all
allies
becomes zero and
=
D* =
[1
[1
— —
idlp)]L,
if
capacities
X/L
{dlp)]{pld)X
(4A.40)
X.
The difference between carrying
D* =
the party can recruit
>
now
is
dlp\ otherwise
case of limited
in the
mobilization and
D* = L — X
in the
case of
full
mobilization.
(4A.41)
Another reasonable criticism of the model would run as follows.
We
argued that parties lose opportunities among workers because
they decrease the salience of class as they adopt supraclass egies.
But
we used
strat-
N{t) to measure the cumulative effect of these
strategies in equation (4A.1), while in fact N{t) contains protest
vote which
is
not an effect of strategies at
excluded the part of N{t) due to protest impact on workers. Our defense sonably that
if
there are people
because the party is
is
wishy-washy
is
that
who
Thus we should have voting from having an
all.
one might also argue
vote for the socialists,
in its class orientation,
a party of generalized discontent rather than of the
endowed with a project seem quite plausible, let
us
that the protest vote has
no effect on workers.
for the future.
reait
because
is it
working class
But since both arguments
examine the consequences of assuming
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
136 '
In this case,
we would
N* =
\
have, as
in the full
model:
—^^ L + -A— kW*, + q q c
c
among workers would become
but the carrying capacity
W* = X -
— ^ kW*. q +
(d/p)
c
or
=
1
1
1
+
c)]
+
q + C/ k(d/p)[c/(q
+
c)]
X
(4A.43)
more simply,
and, to rewrite
If a
k(dlp)[c/iq
=
yV*
(4A.42)
+
^ p(q +
c;
piq +
c)
+
ckp
(4A.44)
ckd
party followed the pure supraclass strategy,
its
carrying
capacity would be
Y\ = L +
X -
(d/p)
+
q
if
,
X/L
c
>
c
(dip)
q + c (4A.45)
and they would be the same as under other assumptions otherwise. If the
party followed the pure class-only strategy,
capacity would include
its
carrying
the workers and the protest vote of
all
allies
Y*^
Q defined by (4A.30).
= X +
QL,
(4A.46)
The difference between carrying
capacities
would be
D* =
[1
-
(d/p)
^
-
Q]L,
if
X/L
> (d/p)^,
otherwise
D* =
[1
-
{dlp)\{pld)X
— QL
in the
limited mobilization.
case of
Appendix
137
D* =
(1
— Q)L —
X,
in the
case of
full
mobilization.
(4A.47)
Tables 4.3 and 4.4 show the information contained in the
main body of the
text
in table
under the alternative assumptions
4.2
now
shows carrying capacities in the case protest voting is ignored altogether. Table 4.4 shows carrying capacities when protest vote is assumed to have no effect on workers. A comparison of these three tables will show that none of our qualitative conclusions depends on the assumptions which were just reviewed. Even numerical differences are few. The most indiscussed. Table 4.3
teresting finding
is
that
once workers are not affected by protest
voting, the pure class-only strategy turns out to be actually the
Table 4.3
Comparison of Carrying Capacities Associated with Supraclass, and Class-only Strategies
Without Protest Voting (^
Actual^
Strategy
=
— 1970 Class
the Actual,
Structure
0)
Limited
Full
Supraclass
Supraclass^
Class-only
Carrying Capacity
Country
Total Left
max
Belgium
18.9
17.3
Denmark
50.7
60.4
Finland
23.2
37.7
France
24.3
23.7
Germany Norway Sweden
28.5
23.6
65.3
81.0
30.3
41.3
56.3
37.5
Socialists
19.1
28.4
max max max
20.3
24.8 33.3
Only
Denmark
38.0
57.6
Finland
18.8
14.1
France
9.9
2.7
Germany‘S
33.1
2.0
33.1
Norway Sweden
62.8
98.7
30.3
39.5
47.1
37.5
^
Actual strategy
^
A max
in this
is
the strategy estimated to best
column
28.4
max max
fit
20.3 24.8
the model.
indicates that the middle classes together are
more numer-
ous than the proportion of the electorate a party can win with either of the two alternative strategies.
As of
1933.
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
138
Table 4.4
Comparison of Carrying Capacities Associated with Supraclass, and Class-only Strategies Protest Voting by Allies
Actual^
Strategy
— 1970 Class Structure
Has No Effect on Workers
Limited
Full
Supraclass
Supraclass^
Country
the Actual,
Class-only
Carrying Capacity
Total Left
max
Belgium
34.6
21.4
Denmark
60.7
61.8
Finland
48.0
56.7
France
30.0
26.8
Germany Norway Sweden
28.5
23.6
65.3
81.0
30.3
41.7
57.1
37.8
Socialists
23.7
54.7
max max max
45.6 25.3
33.3
Only
Denmark
38.0
57.6
Finland
28.1
16.2
France
9.9
2.7
Germany‘-’
9.9
2.1
33.1
62.8
98.7
30.3
45.5
51.7
42.3
Norway Sweden “
Actual strategy
^
A max
in this
is
28.4
max max
the strategy estimated to best
column
fit
26.4 24.8
the model.
indicates that the middle classes together are
more numer-
ous than the proportion of the electorate a party can win with either of the two alternative strategies.
As of 1933.
vote maximizing one for the pre-1933 allies is
SPD.
If protest
voting by
included but assumed to have no effect on workers, then
will turn out that the
it
Belgian and the French Left as well as the
Finnish Social Democrats have actually gone
some way toward
the full supraclass strategy. But otherwise neither the ordering of the strategies with regard to their vote getting effects nor the
com-
parisons of the optimal and the actual strategies are affected by the variations of these assumptions.
Hence, our conclusions are quite
robust empirically.
Vote Maximizing Strategies Altogether
we can
subject the
model
the text to the following variations:
utilized in the
main body of
Appendix
1.
139
When
is
=
L,
assumption
that the mobilization
of
negative
at
we can
use either the
allies is limited
by the
=
support the party draws from workers and then
{plcf)X or that the party continues to fully mobilize the allies
= L
and then
We
2.
can assume that the party has no control over protest
vote and exclude
We
3.
completely from consideration
it
can assume that workers are not affected by the protest
vote
which are only laborious, we can the following about vote maximizing. The condition that
Without going into sert
details,
equilibrium trade-off, as measured by
dtp
>
1
,
is
ici/p), is
as-
the
steeper than unity,
sufficient to guarantee that the pure class-only strategy
maximizes the carrying capacity of the party in the electorate as a whole in all cases, with the exception of protest voting with no on workers and
effect tion
>
is
1.
slightly
more
mobilization of allies,
full
strict,
namely, {dip)
Formally,
if
{dip)
>
1
>
{q
or,
+
when
the condi-
c)l{q
+
when
c
-
qc)
protest voting
has no effect on workers and allies are fully mobilized, {dip)
>
{q
+
c)l{q
+
c
—
(4A.48)
qc).
Otherwise the pure supraclass strategy maximizes the carrying capacity.
This result shows that there are conditions under which the pure class-only strategy
the one that
is
maximizes the steady-state
share of the electorate and that these conditions hold with a minor
modification
independently
sometimes may be called
What remains sufficient in the
is
to
of particular
which
assumptions
into question.
prove that the condition {dip)
main model
>
1
is
also
to guarantee that the pure class-only
maximize the time path of the socialist share of the The results presented above concerned only the carry-
strategy will electorate.
ing capacity, but
it
may
be possible,
in principle, that in
get to the higher carrying capacity a party
would have
order to
to experi-
would have to pursue a strategy inferior for this period. We will now show that this will not be the case the strategy which maximizes the carrying capacity also maximizes the sum of the votes the party would obtain throughout its
ence a period
in
which
history. This proof
is
it
more
difficult than the rest
of
this
appendix.
Are Socialist Leaders Vote Maximizers?
140
The theorem to be demonstrated is the following: If party leaders seek to maximize the sum of the future shares of the electorate by pursing the same strategy throughout the entire period, and if the voting process is
obeys equations (4A.
through (4A.3), then
1 )
>
maximizing strategy as long as {dip)
the
1
and
maximizing strategy otherwise. The leaders program /
= oc
r
2- iWU)
max k
[W(t}
2! /=
is to:
(4A.49)
N(t)),
1
subject to (4A.1) and (4A.2).
=
+
the
is
The Lagrangian
is:
+ ^(01
(4A.50)
I
+
|jl[X(/
+
1)
+
(1
- p)W(t) -
+
Ll{L{t
+
\)
+
{\
-
q
-
dN{t)
c)N{t)
- W{t +
D]
+ ckW{t) - N{t +
1)]
Since both the objective function and the constraints are linear,
Langrangian with regard
the derivative of the
to the strategic
variable will be either positive or negative:
^ = czn(r)iy(r) ^
(4A.51)
0.
This implies that the maximizing strategy will be one of the ex-
treme strategies, that k^
>
k^,
is,
what we need
SIGN The remaining
dW(0 dNit)
first
either k^ or k^. Since to
prove
it
is
always true
that
that
is
^ = SIGN
[I
-
(4A.52)
(d/p)].
ok
order conditions are
T
p-(/)(l
—
^{t)d
— +
p)
~
n(r)(l
|jl(/
—
—
q
1)
—
+
c)
Ctit)ck
—
fl(t
—
=
1)
0,
=
(4A.53)
0.
(4A.54) Since
we
are interested only in the sign of Sn(r)VT(/), note
only that the equations (4A.53) and (4A.54) can be solved to
Appendix
141
obtain n(/) as an explicit function of time. (1(0 will be of the
form:
= ^
(1(0
"*
(4A.55)
C2ffJ2
complex roots of (4A.53 = 4A.54), Cj’s are constants which depend on initial conditions 11(0) and |x(0), and importantly it can be shown that where the m^'s are
(1*
Note
=
real or
[
1
—
that the sign of (1*
(d/p)]
is
the
P p (, c J= G 3 3 u .3 .ti cc 3 GC £ TOGG G c 3 G o c/5
o,
O' >o,
ro
O £ o o d — '
d d d d d d d
O' X — — o 04 — 04 O o d d d d d d
rr 04 00 O' o rn r- 00 O' O' 00 d d d d d d d
— o O' q X d d d d d d
'O ri Ov
00
oo rj cr oc Cl.
Parameters
o-
c
-o 04 ro O'
00 O' ro ro — o — o q q —
sC ri
Oi
r> k-
"O
c
>'>
c o E -2 E c c c 3 OJ o
OQ
Q
Lju
U.
a Z
c o>
-a
73
C o _2 c c C3 >
c u -o
k.
0)
O Z
c/5
(U
o
The Calculations
191
scriptively impossible or because proportions of lies
associated with voting
left
outside the unit interval. Fit
model
a
A
is
workers and
according to these models range far a very
weak
criterion in evaluating
for a theory.
question which
Table A. 2
Fit
is
important
of the Model and
The naive models
Some
interpreting the numerical
in
of
Its
Naive Competitors
are;
1;
Y{t)
II;
K(/)
III;
Y(t)
IV;
Y(t)
V;
Y(t)
VI;
Y(t)
= niQ + m|X(/) = ihq + m^Yit — 1) = niQ + miX(t) + m2Y(t — 1) — W() + m|X(r) + nuLd) — mo + + m2L(t) + m^Y{l — = niQ + miX(/) + moLtO + m^Kt/ —
Where;
Y(t)
is
the socialist vote share of the electorate,
At/)
is
the proportion of
Lit)
is
the proportion of allies in the electorate, and
r
The
fit
is
al-
=
0,
1,2,...
workers
1)
+ m4t
1)
in the electorate,
represents time.
as follows;
Naive Models
Country
Our Model
II
I
III
IV
V
VI
Total Left
Belgium
0.30
0.05
0.11
0.13
n.a.
n.a.
0.08
Denmark
0.94
0.56
0.93
0.93
0.84
0.93
0.95
Finland
0.73
0.04
0.71
0.70
n.a.
n.a.
0.77
France
0.84
0.42
0.77
0.76
0.38
0.74
0.74
Germany Norway Sweden
0.92
0.67
0.90
0.93
0.92
0.93
0.93
0.98
0.00
0.98
0.98
n.a.
n.a.
0.97
0.89
0.65
0.87
0.87
0.70
0.86
0.93
Socialists
Only
Denmark
0.86
0.37
0.84
0.83
0.82
0.86
0.88
Finland
0.16
0.00
0.22
0.20
n.a.
n.a.
0.21
France
0.40
0.00
0.16
0.20
0.00
0.14
0.14
Germany Norway Sweden
0.74
0.81
0.73
0.83
0.81
0.82
0.82
0.92
0.02
0.91
0.90
n.a.
n.a.
0.92
0.85
0.59
0.83
0.82
0.70
0.82
0.89
Note:
Fit is
models.
measured as
corrected for degrees of freedom for
all
the naive
Appendix
192
results
analyzed
in the text
lated values of parameters.
ask
how much would
the
concerns the precision of the calcu-
One way
fit
to
deteriorate
examine if
this
question
is
to
the value of a particular
parameter was slightly different, say by plus or minus 0.01 or 0.05 away from
its
The
best value.
Table
results are presented in
A. 3 for the three theoretically important parameters: p, d, and k. The explained variance is quite sensitive to the values of p and d; it
is
less sensitive to the values
nonlinearly with the parameter
d
c.
Note
in the
of
which occurs
k,
in particular the sensitivity
model
in the
with regard to
case of the Danish Left and the two Nor-
wegian cases. In Denmark the best value of d was extremely low, namely, 0.002. With
model accounts
for
0.9155
vote. If the parameter
d were
this value, the
percent of the variance of the
taken to be lower by 0.01
,
left
that is, if
we
took the value of -0.008,
model would explain 0.8904 percent of the variance, 2.5 percent less. Hence although the calculated value of d is extremely the
low,
we
are reassured that
it
is
The same
positive.
is
true of
Norway. These
however, with regard
results are less reassuring,
parameter d
in the
to the
case of major socialist parties, where the
tends to be quite insensitive to perturbations.
We
have performed,
We took the parameters
therefore, the following experiment.
fit
from
each country and used them to generate the smooth time series with fit
initial
conditions of another country.
We
then measured the
of this series based on one country’s parameters to the observed
were no differences across
series of the other country. If there
countries in their parameter structure, then the
been the same regardless which
The
set
was
the null hypothesis.
The
crucial distinction to be tested
fit
should have
of parameters was used:
results are presented in table
this
A. 4.
was between Sweden and Denmark, on the one hand, and France and Germany, on the other hand, since several interpretations in the text assumed that the estimated differences between these pairs of countries were nonaccidental. The results strongly support this distinction.
The Data
Two
sets of data
were required
to
conduct the numerical analyses
and estimating computations: the distribution of people into classes
and
their distribution according to votes for parties.
These
re-
The Data
Table A. 3
193
Sensitivity Analysis: Proportion of Variance Explained
Selected Parameters Are
Around
the Best Fitting
-0.05
When
Changed by -0.05, -0.01, +0.01, +0.05 Values Smooth Series
—
-0.01
Best
+ 0.01
+ 0.05
Total Left
Parameter p
-2.5927 -0.5743
0.0882
0.1625
0.1067
-0.8675
0.8904
0.9155
0.8952
0.6510
Finland
0.7224
0.7254
0.7250
0.7243
0.7197
France
0.7988
0.8409
0.8425
0.8414
0.8133
Germany Norway Sweden
0.1639
0.8598
0.8694
0.8440
0.5473
-11.1150
0.7018
0.9765
0.7603
-2.4264
0.5148
0.8653
0.8708
0.8575
0.691
-0.6459
0.1003
0.1625
0.1772
-0.2160
Denmark
0.2399
0.8865
0.9155
0.8943
0.3341
Finland
0.7139
0.7239
0.7250
0.7254
0.7144
France
0.8325
0.8422
0.8425
0.8419
0.8290
Germany Norway Sweden
0.8307
0.8674
0.8694
0.8687
0.8428
-2.0225
0.9011
0.9765
0.9240
0.1338
0.8514
0.8701
0.8708
0.8701
0.8529
Belgium
0.1525
0.161
0.1625
0.1635
0.1647
Denmark
0.9155
0.9155
0.9155
0.9155
0.9153
Finland
0.7250
0.7250
0.7250
0.7250
0.7250
France
0.8425
0.8425
0.8425
0.8425
0.8425
Germany Norway Sweden
0.8690
0.8693
0.8694
0.8694
0.8692
0.9760
0.9765
0.9765
0.9764
0.9759
0.8664
0.8707
0.8708
0.8706
0.8659
0.7493
Belgium
Denmark
Parameter d
Belgium
Parameter k
Socialist
Only
Parameter p
Denmark Finland
France
Germany Norway Sweden
0.5214
0.8309
0.8408
0.8372
-5.9082 -0.5892
0.0557
0.1650
0.0472
-
0.6052
0.6475
0.6134
-0.1018
0.1339
0.6838
0.7044
0.6982
0.5121
-2.1776 -1.2460
0.8648
0.9334
0.8767
0.0625
0.7944
0.8485
0.8059
0.1058
1
.4080
{continued)
Appendix
194
Table A. 3
{Continued)
-0.05
+ 0.05
-0.01
Best
+0.01
0.6794
0.8338
0.8408
0.8374
0.7397
-3.1025
0.0329
0.1650
0.0746
-2.1861
France
0.6381
0.6471
0.6475
0.6472
0.6394
Germany Norway Sweden
0.7037
0.7044
0.7044
0.7044
0.7039
0.7157
0.9263
0.9334
0.9261
0.7846
0.7519
0.8464
0.8485
0.8428
0.7476
Denmark
0.8302
0.8402
0.8408
0.8405
0.8321
Finland
0.1614
0.1648
0.1650
0.1650
0.1623
France
0.4899
0.6421
0.6475
0.6432
0.5550
-7.6785
0.5926
0.7044
0.6393
-0.0776
0.9316
0.9333
0.9334
0.9333
0.9318
0.8447
0.8483
0.8485
0.8485
0.8461
Parameter d
Denmark Finland
Parameter k
Germany Norway Sweden Note:
Fit is
calculated by subtracting the ratio of error variance to vote variance
from unity.
quirements determined our choice of countries, which was totally opportunistic.
We
cases but only in
would have very much the seven countries was
liked to analyze other the time series of the
vote sufficiently long and the information concerning class structure
manageable
to warrant statistical analyses.
Austria, Italy, and Spain,
all
We
could not use
of which had major socialist and
other left-wing parties, because these countries did not have a sufficient
dom
number of
elections.
We
did not use the United King-
because the census information concerning class reported for
England and Wales was separate from cause
it
was reported
gregated fashion.
We
in
that for Scotland
and be-
an extremely detailed or excessively ag-
found
that to reconstruct the British class
would have taken resources we did not have. Finally, we did not study the Netherlands, which would have been thestructure
oretically interesting,
and Switzerland because we ran out of time
and money. To reconstruct the class structure for one country
from the beginning of the century took a team of four persons about six months. Analyses of each case took,
at the
minimum.
The Data
195
Table A. 4
Fit
of the Smooth Time Series Generated by Imposing Parameters
from One Country on Observations from Another Country; Major Socialist Parties
Observations from
Denmark
Sweden
France
Germany
-1.66 -2.64
Parameters from
0.85
0.72
0.33
0.84
-18.07 -24.10
France
-2.93
-2.67
0.65
0.33
Germany
-1.48
-5.78
-0.66
0.70
Sweden Denmark
Note:
Fit is calculated
by substracting the
ratio
of error variance to vote variance
from unity.
about another four months of work. Thus
we were
forced to close
the analysis mostly for practical reasons.
With regard
to class structure the
procedure utilized was differ-
Denmark, France, Germany, and Sweden, where detailed information was available, than for Belgium, Finland, and Norway, where only numbers of workers could be measured. Detailed information concerning the evolution of class structure was gathered for Denmark, 1901-60; France, 1901-68; Germany, 1882-1933 and 1950-61; and Sweden, 1900-1960. Full docu-
ent for
mentation of the sources and an explanation of procedures utilized to reconstruct the information is available
on request. The
ography of research reports and other writings
is
bibli-
attached to this
Appendix.
The data
are unique in a
number of ways. They portray
the
evolution of the entire adult population, not only those recognized
by census takers as economically active or gainfully employed.
The
adult population
is
partitioned into a variety of categories
narrower than social classes. Each category
is
further divided by
The categories, and to same in all countries and
sex and by relation to economic activity. the extent possible their content, are the
over time
in
each country. Finally,
in
most cases we reconstructed
the age categories necessary to determine the class composition of the population eligible to vote in national elections.
Basic data sources consisted of the enumerations of the entire population conducted by the national census bureaus. Although
we have
not attempted to assess the reliability of the original in-
Appendix
196
formation,
we have supplemented
these data with the results of
independently conducted censuses of agricultural and industrial establishments whenever these were available. the censuses of occupations to tinctions as consistent as
Our
make
We
have adjusted
the sectoral and status dis-
was possible within each country.
it
data are based on industrial or collective classifications,
rather than
on occupational or individual distinctions. For exam-
ple,
our category of manual workers
ual
workers
in
industrial
in
industry includes
whether
establishments,
man-
all
they
assembly-line workers, drivers, or Janitors. Altogether
are
we used
twenty-two categories, of which fourteen constitute core categories
01
common
to the four countries.
Manual Workers
in
Industry
Industrial sectors include mining, manufacturing
and handicrafts,
construction, and electric, gas and waterworks.
Manual workers
are those listed in the censuses as Arbeiter, ouvrier, and arbe-
jedere; unless they were obviously misclassified, as were, for ex-
ample, the Swedish barbers,
listed together
with other people
who
cut hair under “leather industry workers.”
02 Manual Workers
in
Transport
Transport includes those sectors involved
goods. Communication sectors
—
moving people and
in
post office, telegraph, etc.
—
are
not included here.
03 Manual Workers
in
Agriculture comprises
Agriculture all
agricultural activities such as forestry,
gardening, fishing, animal breeding, and dairy production. Only those manual workers
only
if
they receive
who work
for a
some payment
separate from their employer, and
wage
in
are included here,
and
cash, live in a household
do not own the land which they
farm. 11
Manual Workers
in
Nonproductive Sectors
Nonproductive sectors comprise above, that
is,
administration.
all
sectors other than those listed
commerce, communication,
Two
services,
and public
nonproductive sectors, however, are counted
separately as categories 15 and 16.
12
Nonmanual Employees
in
Productive Sectors
Salaried employees, typically office and technical personnel, in industry, transport, and agriculture, as defined for categories 01,
02, and 03.
The Data 13
197
Nonmanual Employees
in
Nonproduetive Seetors
Salaried employees, typically office, technical, and sales personnel, in the
nonproductive sectors as defined for category
1
1
14 Supervisory Personnel in Productive Sectors
Used only
in
Sweden. Such persons
are included in category 12 in
other countries.
15 Domestic Servants
16 Public Order Employees Included here are the professional military, police and
customs
nel, forest rangers,
highest ranks,
all
officials,
and the
like.
fire
Except for the
levels of the military are included here,
“manual"
they are identified in the censues as
person-
whether
“nonmanual."
or
21 Nonagricultural Petite Bourgeoisie Includes
all
those in nonagricultural sectors
who own workshops,
do not employ anyone outside
stores, shops, etc. but
their family.
Independent professionals, such as doctors and lawyers, are cluded here even
if
in-
they are employers.
22 Agricultural Petite Bourgeoisie Includes nently
all
those in agriculture
employ anyone outside
gory simply includes
all
who own
land but do not perma-
their family. In
who owned
those
Sweden
this cate-
or rented between 2
and 100 hectares of arable land.
23 Agricultural Bourgeoisie Includes
all
those
who own and/or
control agricultural establish-
ments which employ laborers outside of the family. This category is
not used in
Sweden.
24 Dependent Agricultural Labor Includes agricultural
who
laborers
received payment in kind
and/or room and board from their employer and/or
who were
le-
gally tied to land or the employer. During recent years this category includes all those
cultivating
who own some
land but cannot live only from
it.
31 Nonagricultural Bourgeoisie Includes
all
those
who own
or
manage
nonagricultural establish-
ments which employ wage labor as well as the highest echelons of state officials, if the
den
this
censuses allow their identification. In Swe-
category further includes those
who own
or rent over 100
hectares of arable land.
41 Students Living This
is
in
a Separate Household
just a fraction of students: those
who do
not live in their
Appendix
198
were classified as dependents
parents’ household. Other students
and distributed according to the category of the head of household. In France this category listed as
not used since
is
all
students are
dependents.
42 Dependent on Public Assistance: Permanently Institutionalized
This category shows greater inconsistency countries list
— than any
those
who
other.
receive
It is
— within
and across
usually a residual category used to
public
assistance
tionalized in prisons and asylums and
or
who
are
institu-
do not have any known
occupation.
43 Unemployed This category
used only
is
in
France. Elsewhere the unemployed
are listed in the category of their regular or tion.
This category
is
most recent occupa-
not a measure of unemployment.
The remaining categories change from country Denmark and Germany we have: 49 Rentiers and Retired This category includes rentiers and their
all
to country.
For
those retired, regardless of
occupation before retirement.
For Sweden:
49 Otherwise Unclassifiable Includes a small number of otherwise unclassifiable individuals, typically widows about whom no information is available. 09 Manual Workers Retired from Productive Sectors Includes all those whose preretirement occupations would have placed them in categories 01, 02, or 03. 19 Other Retired
Wage Earners
Those whose occupations before retirement would have placed
them
in categories
29 Retired
beginning with
as the first digit.
1
Petite Bourgeoisie
39 Retired Bourgeoisie and Rentiers For France between 1901 and 1936
we
have:
49 All Dependents For these years
it
was not possible
to distribute
dependents ac-
cording to the occupation of the head of household.
39 Rentiers and All Retired
The Data
199
For France after 1954 we used:
49 Inactive Heads of Households 091 19 Retired Petite Bourgeoisie
39 Retired Bourgeoisie All of these categories, unless otherwise indicated, classified
by sex and by status
—
were cross-
either gainfully
employed or
we added
the categories
dependent.
To 01
,
constitute the category of workers
02, 03, and 09 or
workers were not
some
part of retired people
listed separately.
whenever
retired
Adult dependents were classi-
by the position of the head of the household. Allies were
fied
defined as those listed in the categories 11, 12, 13, and 22 in
Denmark and Germany; in
those listed as
1
1,
12, 13, 14, 19,
and 22
Sweden; and persons listed as 11, 12, 13, 19, and 22 in France. In Belgium, Finland, and Norway we were unable to distin-
guish
among
different groups of nonworkers.
Workers were de-
fined in these countries as those listed in categories 01, 02, and
03, and
all
the remaining adults
were treated as
allies for the pur-
poses of calculating the parameters. The data for these three countries are full
not as reliable as those for the four countries for which
information was available.
In order to calculate proportions
electorate,
we used
in the
the information concerning elgibility criteria
based on age and sex. ria,
of workers and allies
We
could not take into account other
crite-
typically concerning residence.
To
interpolate the census information for the dates of elections,
we used
information derived from the censuses of industrial estab-
lishments whenever possible. These censues typically
who
workers
employed each year in establishments of some They are, therefore, much more sensitive to short-
are currently
minimal
size.
term variations.
yond
list
To
extrapolate the trends in class structure be-
the date of the last census
good reasons
we used
a straight line. There are
to believe that, as a result,
we
overestimated the
proportion of workers in the electorate during the 1970s. to believe
such survey studies, the decrease
in the
If
we
are
proportion of
workers was much more rapid than one would expect from extrapolating earlier trends.
The data concerning election results were derived mainly from Mackie and Rose (1974) and, whenever necessary, supplemented
Appendix
200
or updated from other sources^ are quite Huid,
some
Only
in
France, where party lines
difficulties appeared.
from the Radical Socialists
in
To
separate the
SFIO
1924 we used the distribution of the
them in 1919. This procedure was validated by the number given by Duverger (1965:82): our result was 16.05 and
vote between
1967 and 1968
his 16.21 percent. In
we
left
the
MRG
votes to-
gether with the Socialists. All of the vote shares used in the analysis constitute proportions of the entire electorate, not of the votes actually cast.
The data concerning class teams which were composed of
structure
were reconstructed by
the following persons:
Denmark: Richard Jankowski, Ernest Underhill France: Phillip Jackson,
Adam
Przeworski, Barnett Rubin, Er-
nest Underhill
Germany:
Jankowski,
Richard
Adam
Przeworski,
Ernest
Underhill
Sweden:
Amy
Beth Bridges, Robert Melville,
Adam
Przeworski,
Ernest Underhill
Belgium: Barnett Rubin Finland: Ernest Underhill
Norway: Robert Melville, Ernest Underhill Most of hill. hill
the
work was organized and supervised by Ernest Under-
Final data tables
were cleaned and prepared by Ernest Under-
and Michael Wallerstein.
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Name
Index
Abraham, David, 71
Bodin, Luis, 82
Adam, Gerard,
B0rre, Ole, 72, 93, 150, 154,
77, 172
Alford, Robert, 5, 145, 166
171, 177
Allardt, Erik, 87, 150, 154
Braga, Giorgio, 87
Allende, Salvador, 83
Branting, Hjalmar, 16, 32, 57
Althusser, Luis, 8
Braud, Philippe, 151, 154, 155,
Andrae, Carl-Goran, 79
171 Bull,
Edvard
Jr.,
33
Bain, G. S., 77 Balibar, Etienne,
78n
Bartolini, Stefano,
30
Bebel, August, 16, 28 Beer, Samuel, 41 Bell, Daniel,
83
Cazals, Remi, 49
Chodak, Szymon, 22 Converse, Philip, 6, 61, 153, 156 Craig, F.
W.
S.,
57
Berelson, Bernard R., 5 Bergier,
J.
F., 31
Berglund, Sten, 150, 153, 154, 156, 171
Damgaard, Erik, 150, 154, 172 Daniel, Jean, 125
Danielsson, Alex, 15, 20
Bergounioux, Alain, 46, 49
Deat, Marcel, 43, 125
Berlinguer, Enrico, 52, 109
Derfler, Leslie, 25, 28, 41
Bernstein, Eduard, 21, 23, 24,
Downs, Anthony, 125
29, 41, 42, 44, 50, 75, 179
Droz, Jacques, 14
Birnbaum, Pierre, 57, 183
Dupeux, George, 154
Bismarck, Otto von, 181
Duverger, Maurice, 83, 200
Name
218
Elvander, Nils, 116, 118
Jaffre,
Engels, Frederick, 8, 17, 20, 26, 29, 32, 40, 46,
Ensor, R. C. K.,
24-
48-50, 79
22-25
Index
Jerome, 151, 155, 171
Jaures, Jean, 21, 23, 24, 41, 51
Johansson, Ole, 159 Joll,
James, 15
Esping- Anderson, Gosta, 61, 62, 116, 150, 152-56, 161, 171, 172, 174, 177
Kautsky, Karl, 23, 32, 41-43, 50, 79
Klingeman, Hans-Dieter, 151, Fiechtier, Jean-Jacques, 17, 23,
Konopnicki, Guy, 20
49, 118
Krantz, Olle, 37
Furet, Francois, 31 Fusilier,
160, 162, 177
Raymond, 50 Lafferty, William, 17
Gay, Peter, 21, 24, 118, 179
Landauer, Carl, 20, 41, 42, 50
Geertz, Clifford, 182
Laski, Harold, 21
Gerstle, Jacques, 72
Lembruch, Gerhard, 77
Goldberg, Samuel, 98
Lenin, V.
Goldthorpe,
Leser, Norbert, 16
J.
H., 102
Gomick, Vivian, 51 Gramsci, Antonio,
I.,
24
Lindstrom, Ulf, 150, 153, 154,
1, 7, 8,
21,
156, 172 Lipset, S. Martin, 5, 7, 102, 162
47, 51, 73, 126, 143
Green, Nathanael, 71
Lockwood, David, 182
Guerin, Daniel, 15
Lorwin, Val, 28
Guesde, Jules, 23, 41, 49
Lukacs,
Guinchard, Axel, 48
Luxemburg, Rosa,
Hansson, Per Albin, 24, 51
Mabille, Xavier, 28
Hardie, Keir, 36
Helander, Voitto, 75
McDonald, Ian, 54 MacDonald, Ramsay, 41 McGurk, John, 20 McKibbin, Ross, 41 Mackie, Thomas, 199
Henderson, Arthur, 56
McLellan, David, 16
Haupt, George, 15, 42, 59
Heady, Bruce, 75 Heidar, Knut, 44, 79,
Hentilla,
1
18
Seppo, 51, 118, 121
Gy orgy,
3, 19
17, 18
Malatesta, Errico, 15
Hill, Keith, 87, 150, 161
Man, Henrik
Hirschleifer, Jack, 123
Mandell, Ernest, 32
Hobsbawm,
Eric, 21, 32,
Horkheimer, Max,
2,
34n
18
Howard, Dick, 18 Hunt, Richard, 42, 43, 71, 118
de,
43
Manin, Bernard, 46, 49 Marcus, Steven, 32
Markham, James M., 57 Martin, Andrew, 109 Martin, Penny Gil, 50,
Ingelhart, Ronald, 155
152, 155
1
15,
1
18,
Name
Index
219
Martinussen, Willy, 151, 152, 155
Rose, Richard, 6, 199
Rosenberg, Arthur, 49
Marx, Karl,
1, 8,
14-17, 26, 32,
40, 41, 43, 46-48, 54, 79, 87,
Sainsbury, Diane, 104, 105
181
Sarivik, Bo, 62, 64, 87, 152,
Menil, George de, 54
155, 156, 159, 172, 174, 177
Michels, Roberto, 8, 19, 20, 41,
109
Sartre, Jean-Paul, 9, 18,
Scase, Richard,
1
18
Miliband, Ralph, 19, 20
Schelling,
Millerand, Alexandre, 13, 22, 23,
Schlesinger, John, 125
25, 42
53
Thomas, 54
Schmitter, Philippe, 78
Mitterand, Francois, 162 Mitchell, Harvey, 77
Schorske, Carl, 16, 17, 27, 118, 119
Neimark, M. A., 41
Schumaher, Kurt, 44, 82 Schumpeter, Joseph, 4
Neumann, Sigmund, 83
Schwerin,
Nicolaus, Martin, 43
Sellier, Francois,
Nillson, Carl-Axel, 37
Soderpalm, Sven Anders, 83, 166 Solow, Robert, 54
Okasaki, Ayanori, 34
Sombart, Werner, 31
Olson, Mancur
Stehouwer, Jan, 72
Jr.,
81
Stein,
Don
S.,
75
77
Lorenz von, 31
Paepe, Cesar de, 20, 42, 50
Stephens, John, 64, 153, 161
Panitch, Leo, 77
Streeck, Wolfgang, 75
Pappi, Franz von, 62, 149, 151,
Sully, Melanie,
84
Sylos Labini, Paolo, 34
162, 171
Paterson, William, 44, 82
Pesonen,
Pertti,
149, 150, 154
Tarschys, Daniel, 61, 72
Petersson, Olaf, 152, 156, 172
Tawney, R. H., 18
Pizzomo, Alessandro,
Theil, Henri, 181
9, 123
Plekhanov, Georgij V., 101, 102
Alastair, 28, 82, 83
Thorez, Maurice, 82
Poulantzas, Nicos, 19, 78n Price, Robert,
Adam,
Tingsten, Herbert, 15-17, 20,
22-24, 26, 32, 41, 42, 49, 50,
77
Proudhon, Pierre-Joseph, 14 Przeworski,
Thomas,
61, 77
51, 53, 121 Togliatti, Palmiro, 51
Tomasson, Richard, 44 Rabier, Jean-Claude, 151, 154, 155, 171
Touchard, Jean, 51, 82, 125 Toutain, J-C., 34
Riker, William, 109
Rimbert, Pierre, 72
Urry, John, 43
Rokkan, Stein, 64
Urwin, Derek, 6
Name
220
Uusitalo,
Hannu, 150, 152, 154,
155, 171
Wallerstein, Michael, 54
Wesotowski, Wtodzimierz, 150, 154
Valen, Henry, 64, 151-53, 155, 156 Visser, Jelle, 75, 77, 78
Vollmar, Georg von, 24
Index
Windmuller, John, 75
Wittman, Donald, 124, 125 Wright, Erik Olin, 57
Subject Index
Address
to the
Communist League
Manifesto of
1959, 57
(1850), 48 Allies: definition of,
among
portion
16; Electoral
41-42; pro-
adults, 45;
toward, 50-
socialist strategy
Calculation procedures, 65-66, 85, 187-89;
51, 80-81 Anarchists: Congress at
de-Fonds 1870,
14;
toral participation,
Chaud-
and elec-
14-15
Austrian Socialist Party: electoral progress of, 27, 29-30; Linz
Programme of 1926, 16
fit
of the model,
189-90; sensitivity of parameters,
191-95
among actual among allies, 88;
Carrying capacity: voters, 94;
among workers,
69; associated
with pure strategies, 131-33; cross-national differences of,
94-96;
in the electorate,
89-94
Belgian Parti Ouvrier, 20; electoral
progress of, 27, 29-30;
founded
in
1885, 50; Labor
Plan of 1933, 43;
Programme
Class structure, evolution
cording to Marx, 26; reconstructed for various countries,
of 1894, 41
Belgian Socialist Party,
49-50
of: ac-
192-201
Communist Manifesto,
8, 26, 33,
167
Brabant Socialist Party (Parti Socialiste
Labour Party, 41; decision form government in 1924,
British to
Braban^on), 20, 42 Daily Tribune
26
(New York,
1850),
Subject Index
222
Danish Social Democratic Party;
sured, 68; equilibrium trade-off
and vote maximizing
actual
compared, 110, 114,
strategies
117; electoral progress of,
and cumulative trade-off mea-
28-
measured, 70; immediate tradeoff measured, 67; and other
30; electoral strategies of, 86;
parties,
73-74; and trade
and farmers, 115; Programme
unions,
74-78
of 1888, 42; range of choice available to, 108-9; trade-off
faced by, 72-73; and trade unions,
1
Finnish Social Democratic Party; actual and vote
15-19
strategies
Dutch Socialist Party, electoral progress of, 28-31
maximizing
compared,
1
10,
electoral strategies of, 86;
Electoral participation, 13-25;
anarchist views of, 14-15; ef-
on party
strategies,
20-22,
184; effect on workers’ organization, 18-20; socialist of,
views
15-18
differences they
make, 106-9,
128-31; effectiveness of egies measured, 86;
strat-
how
108-9; trade-off faced by, 73 First International (International
Workingmen’s Association); Hague Congress of, 22; Marx’s Inaugural Address to, 48
choose them, 80-81, of,
82-84; and intertemporal trade120-126; language
50-51; limited
French Socialist Parties (Parti Socialiste Fran^aise,
Socialiste), 43, tual
84-86, 103-6; instruments
offs,
to,
French Communist Party, 72
Electoral strategies, socialist; and
parties
14;
electoral progress of, 27, 30;
range of choice available
fect
1
SFIO,
Parti
82-83, 182;
and vote maximizing
strategies
compared, 110, 114;
electoral progress of, 30; electoral strategies of, 86;
intertemporal trade-offs ana-
of,
lyzed, 121-26; Marseille
vs. full su-
pure strategies defined, 104-5,
Programme of 1892, 42; Nantes Programme of 1894,
127-28; strategies of various
42; range of choice available
praclass strategies, 110-12;
parties, 85,
1
ac-
10-26; and trade
to,
108-9; Tour Programme of
unions, 118-19; with regard to
1902, 23; trade-off faced by,
craftsmen, artisans, and small
72
merchants, 42; with regard to farmers, 42, 165-66; with re-
gard to salaried employees,
43-
44, 178-79; with regard to
women and
youth, 44
Electoral trade-off,
66; and tion,
55-56, 60-
communist competi-
71-73; cross-national
differences of, 73-79; delayed
German Communist
Party (KPD),
71
German
Social Democratic Party
(SPD), 3, 17, 80, 82, 182; actual
and vote maximizing
compared, 110, 114; electoral progress of, 27-30, strategies
64; electoral strategies of, 86,
Subject Index
223
88; Erfurt Congress of 1891,
Programme of 1891,23,33,41,49;Gorlitz Programme of 1921, 51; Gotha Programme of 1875, 49; Programme of 1927, 42-43; range 24, 28; Erfurt
of choice available
to,
108-9;
Swedish Peoples’ Party
in
Finland, 74
Swedish Social Democratic Party (SAP), 20, 50, 53, 68, 82-83; actual
and vote maximizing
strategies
compared, 110, 114,
117; discussion of electoral par-
Resolution of the Eisenach
ticipation,
Congress 1870,
campaigns, 104-5; electoral
16; trade-off
faced by, 71
15-17; electoral
progress of,
G1o5 Wolny (London, 1867), 26
28-3
1
,
64; elec-
toral strategies of, 86,
1
15;
intertemporal trade-offs ana-
International Herald Tribune
(1983), 57
Labour and
the
1889, 16,
New
Programme of 22,41,49; Pro-
lyzed, 120-26;
Social Order
(1918), 57
gramme of 1897, 23; Programme of 1911, 42, 50; Programme of 1920, 41; range of choice available
Norwegian Labor Party, 80; actual strategies
electoral
17, 50,
and vote maximizing
compared, 110, 114; progress of, 28-30;
electoral strategies of, 86,
range of choice available
1
15;
to,
to,
108-9;
trade-off faced by, 70, 72; and trade unions,
115-19
Trade Unions, 74-77; and tradeoffs facing parties,
77-79,
115-19
108-9; trade-off faced by, 7273; and trade unions,
116-19
Voting, and class, 5-6; model
and surveys compared, 147-
The Origins of Private Property, Family, and the State, 17
Protest vote, 87,
58; theory of,
9-11, 141-47
Voting, by middle classes: of
Beamte und Angestellte in Germany, 61; of farmers in various
134-38
countries, 165, 168-70; histor-
Salaried employees, as proportion
of labor force, 43
Second International, Socialist goals,
toral
various
countries, 164-67; impact of 15, 17
22-23
Stagnation of socialist and
particular groups distinguished,
177-78; left
29-31, 58; and electrade-off, 88, 126; and
voting,
ical trends of,
1,
its
impact on workers’
voting observed, 172-79; of
nonworkers
in
Sweden, 62; of
petty bourgeoisie in various
party strategies, 88, 113-19,
countries, 166, 168-70; of
126; and workers as a minority,
small farmers in France, 5; and
34-40, 126
trade union
Suffrage,
36-37
membership, 174-
77; in various countries,
model
Name
224
Voting, middle classes (contd.)
and surveys, 150-56; ers,
.
work-
vs.
s
countries,
Index
model and surveys,
150-56
166-67, 171-72
Voting, by workers: of agri-
Workers, 31-34, 50; as a minor-
31-40; as a proportion of
cultural vs. industrial workers,
ity,
149; historical trends of, vari-
adults, 27,
ous countries, 158-64; and
tion of the electorate,
industrialization, 163; in
den, 5, 64;
in
various
Swe-
33-35; as a propor-
37-40;
and socialism, according
to
Marx, 32-33, 46-47, 49-50
I
«
I
t
BOSTON PUBL
C
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BRARY
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1 1
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of th/s
Boston Public Libmry
The Date Due Card
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in-
dicates the date on or before which this
book should be returned
to the Library.
Please do not remove cards from this pocket.
The authors analyze from 1890
the history of electoral socialism
to the present in
seven European countries:
Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Norway, and Sweden. They develop a theory that interprets individual voting behavior as an effect of social pro-
They use this becomes or does not
cesses of collective identity formation.
when
theory to understand
become
class
—
— an important determinant of voting behavior.
Their main finding
is
that left-wing political parties
have historically faced an electoral dilemma. Since
workers were never sufficiently numerous to provide an electoral majority, working-class parties
seek support across class
were forced
to
This pursuit of votes
lines.
necessarily resulted, however, in diluting the salience of class as a basis of individual behavior and eventually in
losing potential support
among
workers. Consequently,
even as socialists entered into the competition" for votes, their great expectations could never
be
fulfilled.
Today,
with Western Europe experiencing deindustrialization, the authors argue that the working-class base of left-
wing
parties, as well as their ability to reach across class
lines, is
being eroded.
Przeworski and Sprague employ a mathematical
model
to reconstruct voting patterns of
workers and
other groups since the turn of the century, their perspective, they use this
model
"ib
validate
to predict results
of survey studies conducted since ihc 15 Jos. Highly readable, with dices,
all
technical material relegated to appen-
Paper Stones represents signal contributions
number of fields and
will find a
to a
wide readership among
political scientists, historians, sociologists,
and
all
those
interested in socialism.
“The
authors’
emphasis on
sents a significant
new
political strategies repre-
interpretation. Their ability to
derive important time trends and explanations from a limited data set and rigorous modeling sets an important
new standard
for research in political history.”
— Sidney Verba, Harvard University Adam Przeworski
is
Martin A. Ryerson Distinguished
Service Professor of Political Science, University of
Chicago, and the author of Capitalism and Social
Democracy.
John Sprague
is
professor of political science, Wash-
He
the author of Voting
ington University,
St.
Patterns of the U.S.
Supreme Court, and
Adam tists.
Louis.
is
is
co-author with
Przeworski of Systems Analysis for Social Scien-
BOOKS OF RELATED INTEREST Nationalism and the State John Breuilly
“This
is
a hold account, rigorously
argued and lucidly presented. Breuilly
supports his case with an impressive array of historical detail and a wealth of cumulative comparisons. rational state, he provides a
By singling out the pivotal role of the modern welcome corrective to so many sociological
accounts which would ‘reduce’ nationalism to economic, cultural, or even socio-psychological levels of analysis.”
— Anthony
Geography Quarterly Paper ISBN: 0-226-07412-9
D. Smith, Political
1985 X, 422 pages First
World Nationalisms
Class and Ethnic Politics in Northern Ireland and Quebec
Katherine O’Sullivan See
major study of the origin, development, and dynamics of ethnic separatist movements, using two richly textured case studies of Northern
This
is
a
Ireland and
Quebec. See offers an illuminating
historical analysis that
goes
beyond the previous explanations of ethno-nationalism and explains why Northern Ireland remains caught in sectarian struggle while Quebec has
made
a successful transition to a secular state.
1986
200 pages Cloth ISBN: 0-226-74416-7 Paper ISBN: 0-226-74417-5
A Lost Left Three Studies
in
Socialism and Nationalism '
David Howell
A
Lost Left
is
•
an incisive, multileveled history of the development of British
socialism during the critical period 1914-28, a time in which less attentive to the salience of cultural distinctions
nationalism. Howell’s study illustrates key
leftists
became
and embraced
moments and themes
British experience of socialism and nationalism by focusing
in the
on the careers
of James Connolly, John Maclean, and John Wheatley.
1986
350 pages Cloth ISBN: 0-226-35513-6 Paper ISBN: 0-226-35514-4
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS