Introduction: parties, party choice, and partisanship in East Asia.
Dalton, Russell J. ; Chu, Yun-han ; Shin, Doh Chull 等
Political parties are widely seen as "a sine qua non for the
organization of the modern democratic polity and for the expression of
political pluralism." (1) The manner in which parties articulate
political interests largely defines the nature of electoral competition,
the representation of citizen interests, the policy consequences of
elections-and ultimately the functioning of the democratic process. (2)
Consequently, the linkage between citizens and parties is an
essential aspect of democratic politics--and the focus of the articles
in this collection. By connecting citizens to the democratic process,
political parties should give voice to social groups and their policy
interests. Electoral choice is a vehicle for expressing the policy
interests and political values of the public. Electoral studies in
Western democracies have demonstrated how partisanship is a core element
in political identities and behaviors, as well as a heuristic for
organizing political information and guiding political choice. (3)
Partisan ties also supposedly motivate citizens to participate in the
political process. Thus, partisanship is routinely a strong predictor of
a wide range of political predispositions and participatory actions
ranging from political efficacy, to political involvement, to voting
choice.
These various linkages between citizens and parties are the main
theme of this collection of articles, which is motivated by an
overarching question: are the theoretical presumptions about the nature
of electoral choice and the impact of partisan attachments equally
applicable to the consolidated and emerging democracies of East Asia? To
answer this question, we assembled a group of leading comparative
scholars using a set of new cross-national public opinion surveys of
East Asian nations. (4)
Needless to say, East Asian political parties and party systems are
quite diverse and were created under very different historical
conditions. Therefore, the context of party competition differs across
nations,
and perhaps in comparison to other developing democracies. The
trajectories of regime evolution also produce cross-national
differences. Any sweeping region-wide generalization about the nature of
electoral choice and the implications of partisanship is unlikely to be
fully accurate. However, some characteristics are widely assumed to
apply to many of these party systems. These features are salient enough
to generate some reasonable assumptions about the "normality"
of the region while bearing in mind that most nations deviate from this
"normality" at least to some extent.
Several East Asian democracies have experienced socioeconomic
modernization in a compressed time. East Asian parties thus did not
follow the same development trajectory as political parties in Western
democracies, which gradually emerged from preexisting social cleavages
and patterns of elite politics. (5) A firm social group base can provide
a foundation for party ideology and identity, and without such group
connections, parties may be more personalistic or patronistic
organizations. Thus, much of the literature on East Asia notes the
shallow social base of most parties, although this literature is
typically limited to a single nation and election. (6)
There are frequent claims that most East Asian party systems do not
exhibit institutionalized programmatic electoral competition. Many Asian
parties appear more pragmatic than programmatic. Many try to be all
things to all people. The traditional left-right economic cleavage or
similar broad ideological frameworks that are familiar in Western
democracies appear underdeveloped in most East Asian democracies.
Political parties often compete based on valence issues, such as
anticorruption, prosperity, efficiency, or personal charisma of the
party leader, or based on clientelism and district service. In South
Korea and Taiwan, for example, cleavages anchored on regionalism and
national identity respectively have structured party politics.
The extent of party system institutionalization also varies greatly
among these democracies. (7) Institutionalized party systems are
emerging in Japan and Taiwan and to some extent in South Korea and
Mongolia. However, the evidence of electoral system change and party
system change in East Asia indicates continuing volatility (see Benjamin
Reilly's contribution to this issue). Similarly, Scott Mainwaring
and Edurne Zoco find that interelection party volatility in Japan,
Taiwan, Korea, and the Philippines is approximately two and a half times
the level of volatility in established Western party systems, although
comparable to many Latin American nations. (8)
Lastly, most of the major political parties in East Asia are of
recent creation. With few exceptions (such as the Liberal Democratic
Party in Japan and the Kuomintang in Taiwan), most parties have a life
span shorter than twenty years. In addition, the founding of these
parties was usually synchronized with the rise of a new political
leader. The condition under which these leader-centered parties were
created makes it very difficult to distinguish voters' partisan
attachment from the popularity of their charismatic leaders. Most East
Asian parties also appear organizationally thin. The degree of
organizational structure, mass member support, and a party
administrative elite--as exists in most Western parties--still appear
rare in most Asian democracies. Even in the longest-established
democracy in East Asia, Japanese membership in political parties is only
a fraction of the level in most Western democracies. (9)
In a nutshell, the nature of political parties in East Asia may
weaken the linkage between parties and citizens, as well as attenuate the usefulness of partisanship in structuring citizens' political
orientations. In addition to these formative factors, East Asia parties
may be experiencing the seemingly global trend of the decreasing
relevance of parties as vehicles of political mobilization and interest
articulation. The "decline of parties" literature argues that
parties are increasingly failing in their capacity to engage the
ordinary citizen, people are increasingly reluctant to commit themselves
to parties, citizens are less likely to show up at polling stations, and
they vote with a weaker sense of partisan consistency. (10) At the same
time, interest associations and social movements are becoming much more
vigorous competitors to parties for the opportunity to represent and
mobilize citizens outside the electoral arena. (11)
We began our research with these questions about the strength of
citizen-party linkages in East Asia. However, there are also reasons why
parties and partisanship may become more central to contemporary East
Asian politics. As the number of elections increases, parties have
stronger incentives to develop an institutional base to perpetuate their
voter base--and party stability and constancy should increase. (12) In
addition, the past decade has witnessed other signs of democratic
maturation, such as the transition in the control of government in
Taiwan, Korea, and Japan. Thus, our research tries both to test past
theories of partisanship as applied to East Asia and to provide an
initial cross-national comparison of the bases of party choice, and the
implications of partisanship for these publics.
The Framework of Comparison
A decade ago, broad cross-national comparisons of voting choice,
party preferences, and the impact of partisanship in East Asia would not
have been possible because the necessary research resources did not
exist. Our comparative analyses are possible only because of the recent
development of several cross-national public opinion surveys in East
Asia. Indeed, one of the major research lessons of these articles is to
demonstrate the rich range of cross-national surveys that now exist.
The articles of this issue draw upon three different cross-national
public opinion surveys (see Table 1). (13) The Comparative Study of
Electoral Systems (CSES) focuses on electoral choice and partisan
images; it asks a common battery of questions in postelection surveys.
Five East Asian nations were included in the second module of the CSES.
A consortium of public opinion scholars conducted the East Asia
Barometer (EAB) survey, which included six East Asian democracies.
Finally, the 1999-2002 World Values Survey expanded its data collection
in East Asia to incorporate most of the democracies in the region,
thereby increasing the potential to compare Asia to other regions of the
world. From these surveys we include all the East Asian nations that
qualify as electoral democracies where party competition and partisan
behavior can be meaningfully compared. (14) Each article in this issue
typically draws upon the one survey project that best addresses the
theoretical concerns of the article, and in some cases compares results
between surveys. Moreover, the existence--and continuance--of these
three large projects signals a new era of potential comparative public
opinion studies of East Asia.
Our theoretical interests focus on the electoral choices and
partisanship of East Asian publics. However, much of the theorizing on
party choice and partisan behavior is derived from literature and
theories from established democracies. For example, theories of social
cleavage voting in established party systems provides a benchmark for
judging the extent of cleavage voting in East Asian democracies, just as
the level of party identifications in established Western democracies is
a benchmark for comparing the extent of partisanship in East Asia.
Comparison is the essence of comparative politics, and many of our
theoretical interests imply the need for cross-regional comparisons to
Western democracies or other emerging democracies.
We address this point in two ways. First, several of the chapters
have explicit comparisons to other nations available through these
international survey projects, such as the comparisons of partisanship
in Emile Sheng's article. In addition, we cite literature from
other developing democracies as a comparison to East Asia. Second, we
selected two established democracies--Australia and New Zealand--that
were part of both the CSES and World Values Survey, as specific
comparisons. We are not arguing that Australia and New Zealand are
typical established democracies, because there is not a single typical
Western nation. Elements of both electoral systems and party systems are
distinct. (15) However, including these nations in several chapters
allows us to see how these two established Western democracies compare
with East Asian nations in various models of individual-level behavior.
In summary, the contributions in this issue vary in the set of
nations they examine because these three datasets only partially
overlap, but together these surveys provide valuable perspectives on
parties and public opinion in East Asia.
Studying Partisanship in East Asia
Despite the fundamental importance of the topic of party
development and institutionalization for the democratization process,
there is little systematic cross-national evidence on the linkage
between citizens and political parties in East Asia. Individual country
studies are often insightful, but it is difficult to draw broad
conclusions from separate studies that use different theoretical or
empirical approaches to this topic. Moreover, just as party politics is
still relatively new in several emerging democracies of East Asia,
research on public opinion and voting behavior is also developing.
The contributors to this issue focus on three broad themes. First,
we begin by describing the structure of party systems across East Asia.
Benjamin Reilly describes the electoral systems of Asian democracies and
how electoral reforms have recently reshaped the framework of party
competition. Reilly notes that reformers enacted these changes to
counterbalance the lack of institutionalization and representation of
East Asian parties described above; later chapters examine in more
detail whether such countertrends are observable. Russell Dalton and
Aiji Tanaka describe the polarization of parties in these systems, and
find that the clarity of electoral choice varies substantially across
these nations, almost independent of the electoral structures that
Reilly describes.
A second set of articles examines the sources of party preferences.
Ian McAllister analyzes the social group bases of party choice. He
concludes that traditional social cleavages--such as class, religion,
and urban/rural differences--exert a weak overall impact on party choice
in East Asia, while age differences in party support emerge in several
nations as a residue of the transition to democracy. Aie-Rie Lee
presents a parallel analysis of how values and policy attitudes guide
party preferences. She shows that a new authoritarian-libertarian value
cleavage is emerging as a consequence of social modernization, and these
values now have more weight than traditional economic policy attitudes
in shaping party preferences. Sheng describes the extent of partisanship
on four different indicators among Asian publics as a measure of party
system institutionalization. He finds that when compared to most Western
democracies, partisanship in East Asian nations is relatively weak,
reflecting the less institutionalized nature of Asian party systems.
The third and final section considers the consequences of
partisanship on citizen behavior. Yun-han Chu and Min-hua Huang examine
whether partisanship mobilizes individual participation in electoral and
nonelectoral participation. Despite weaker party ties among Asian
publics, they demonstrate that partisanship has a similar mobilizing
effect as in established democracies. This implies that party system
institutionalization in Asian democracies will generate similar
consequences as in the established democracies. Doh Chull Shin and
Rollin Tusalem describe how partisanship is linked to popular images of
the democratic process. They demonstrate that partisanship motivates
East Asians to endorse the democratic performance of their political
system and embrace democracy as the best possible system of government.
This is not a complete agenda of the ways that partisanship affects
citizens and the political process, but we feel this research provides
the first systematic comparisons of key features of partisan political
behavior across Asian democracies.
In summary, this collection attempts to move forward the
comparative study of political behavior across East Asia. We understand
that citizen connections to parties and the implications of these ties
are essential for judging the vitality of democracy. In addition, we
believe that only by comparing nations can we understand the nature of
party politics in any single nation and their overall development in the
region as a whole. We hope the articles in this special issue make
progress in moving us forward.
Notes
(1.) Ingrid van Beizen, "How Political Parties Shape
Democracy." Center for the Study of Democracy, University of
California, Irvine, working paper 04-16.
(2.) Joseph LaPalombara and Myron Weiner, eds., Political Parties
and Political Development (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966);
Larry Diamond and Richard Gunther, eds., Political Parties and Democracy
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001); Russell J. Dalton and
Ian McAllister, eds., "Political Parties and Political
Development," special issue of Party Politics (March 2007).
(3.) Angus Campbell et al., The American Voter (New York: Wiley,
1960); Warren Miller, "The Cross-National Use of Party
Identification as a Stimulus to Political Inquiry." In Ian Budge,
Ivor Crewe, and Dennis Farlie, eds., Party Identification and Beyond
(New York: Wiley, 1976); Russell J. Dalton and Martin P. Wattenberg,
eds., Parties Without Partisans: Political Change in Advanced Industrial
Democracies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).
(4.) These articles were first presented at a research conference
held at the East West Center in Honolulu. We want to acknowledge Chung
Nam Kim and the POSCO program, the East Asian Barometer Program, and the
Center for the Study of Democracy at the University of California,
Irvine, for their support of this project.
(5.) Seymour Martin Lipset and Stein Rokkan, eds., Party Systems
and Voter Alignments (New York: Free Press, 1967).
(6.) Scott Flanagan et al., The Japanese Voter (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1994); Yun-han Chu and Tse-min Lin, "The Process
of Democratic Consolidation in Taiwan: Social Cleavages, Electoral
Competition and the Emerging Party System." In Hung-Mao Tien, ed.,
Taiwan's Electoral Politics and Democratic Transition (New York: M.
E. Sharpe, 1996); Doh Chull Shin, Mass Politics and Culture in
Democratizing Korea (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999).
(7.) Stefano Bartolini and Peter Mair, "Challenges to
Contemporary Political Parties." In Diamond and Gunther, eds.,
Political Parties and Democracy, pp. 327-343.
(8.) Scott Mainwaring and Edurne Zoco, "Political Sequences
and the Stabilization of Interparty Competition," Party Politics 13
(March 2007): 155-178.
(9.) Only 3.5 percent of Japanese reported a party membership,
which was about half the average among the fifteen European Union member
states in 1999 (5.6 percent). Ronald Inglehart et al., Human Values and
Beliefs: A Cross-Cultural Sourcebook (Siglo XXI Editores, 2004).
(10.) See Dalton and Wattenberg, Parties Without Partisans; Dalton
and McAllister, "Parties and Political Development."
(11.) Philippe Schmitter, "Parties Are Not What They Once
Were." In Diamond and Gunther, eds., Political Parties and
Democracy.
(12.) See Mainwaring and Zoco, "Political Sequences," pp.
164-167.
(13.) The data used here were generally downloaded from the
websites of each project, which also include further documentation for
each survey. These data are available free to other researchers:
Comparative Study of Electoral Systems (www.cses.org), East Asia
Barometer Survey (eacsurvey.law.ntu.edu.tw/), and the World Values
Survey (www.worldvaluessurvey.org). We express our appreciation to all
the relevant principal investigators for sharing their data with the
research community.
(14.) Using 2002 as the approximate date for most of our survey
data, the Freedom House ranked Mongolia, the Philippines, Japan, Korea,
Taiwan, and Thailand as free. Of course, Thailand then experienced a
coup in 2006, but this occurred subsequent to the EAB Thai survey.
Indonesia was rated as only partly free, but because of the rapid
advance of electoral democracy since 1998, we include Indonesia in our
study where possible.
(15.) Arend Lijphart, Patterns of Democracy (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1999); David Farrell, Comparing Electoral Systems
(London: Macmillan, 1998); Pippa Norris, Electoral Engineering (New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2004).
Table 1 The Survey Projects on East Asia and the Nations Surveyed
CSES EAB WVS
Nations
Surveyed Year Sample N Year Sample N Year Sample N
East Asia
Indonesia -- -- -- -- 2002 1,004
Japan 2004 2,010 2003 1,408 2000 1,362
Mongolia -- -- 2003 1,144 -- --
Philippines 2004 1,200 2002 1,200 2001 1,200
South Korea 2004 1,500 2003 1,500 2002 1,200
Taiwan 2001 2,022 2001 1,415 1995 1,452
Thailand -- -- 2002 1,546 -- --
Established
democracies
Australia 2004 1,769 -- -- 1995 2,048
New Zealand 2002 1,740 -- -- 1998 1,201
Note: Table describes surveys field dates and sample sizes from the
Comparative Study of Electoral Systems, module 2 (CSES); the East Asia
Barometer, wave I (EAB); and the World Values Survey (WVS).