Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1052166 | Electoral Studies | 2013 | 13 Pages |
Drawing on the concept of habitual voting (Plutzer, 2002), Franklin (2004) argues that the effects of electoral context on voter turnout will be largely limited to the cohorts who have experienced few elections in their lifetime. Those with more electoral experience would thus remain unaffected. Testing the above hypothesis is a way of a feasible indirect examination of the concept of habitual voting. Such tests have so far focused primarily on the impact of electoral competitiveness on turnout. I propose a new superior analysis of Franklin's hypothesis that, I claim, approaches the standards of a natural experiment. My test – focusing on the national election cycles as a contextual trait of the European Parliament elections – delivers new evidence supporting this hypothesis.
► I study habitual voting in the European Parliament (EP) elections. ► National election cycles constitute the context of the EP elections. ► Electoral experience mediates the impact of context on turnout in the EP elections. ► My test lends suggestive support to the concept of habitual voting.