Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1052107 Electoral Studies 2012 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The ‘personalization of politics’ hypothesis assumes that personalization takes place in election campaigns, in the mass-media, and in the calculus of voting. We claim that the distinction between person/leader and organization implicitly assumed by the personalization hypothesis does not capture how voters observe politics. In contrast, our hypothesis is that evaluation criteria regarding parties and leaders are not in competition but reinforcing. This hypothesis is investigated by looking at the relevance of party and leader evaluations for vote choice in the German Federal Elections in 1998, 2002, 2005, and 2009. The results show that party evaluation matter more than leader evaluation and, more importantly, a match of parties and their leaders with regard to general evaluations determine vote choice as good as single evaluations together.

► Personalization and the effect of leader and party evaluations on vote choice. ► Parties and their personnel form a unity in the views of the voters. ► Party and leader evaluations mutually increase their respective impact on the vote. ► Party identification decreases the impact of both, party and leader evaluations.

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