Replication Data for: Do European elections enhance satisfaction with European Union democracy?

DOI

We provide the first individual-level test of whether holding supranational elections in the European Union fosters satisfaction with European Union democracy. First, we examine whether participation at the European Parliament election fosters satisfaction with democracy and whether, among those who participated, a winner–loser gap materializes at the EU level. Second, we examine under which conditions participating and winning in the election affect satisfaction with European Union democracy, focusing on the moderating role of exclusive national identity. Our approach relies on panel data collected during the 2019 European Parliament elections in eight countries. We demonstrate that while participating and winning increase satisfaction, such positive boost does not materialize among those with exclusive national identity. These findings hold an important message: elections are no cure to deep-seated alienation.

Plescia, C., Wilhelm, J., Kritzinger, S., Schüberl, T., Partheymüller, J. (2020). RECONNECT 2019 European Parliament Election Panel Survey (SUF edition), https://doi.org/10.11587/MOV0EZ, AUSSDA

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.11587/sau5aj
Related Identifier IsSupplementTo https://doi.org/10.1177/1465116520970280
Metadata Access https://api.datacite.org/dois/10.11587/sau5aj
Provenance
Creator Plescia, Carolina; Daoust, Jean-François; Blais, André
Publisher AUSSDA
Contributor The Austrian Social Science Data Archive; AUSSDA
Publication Year 2020
Funding Reference European Commission: 770142
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Dataset; Numeric
Format text/tab-separated-values; application/x-stata-syntax
Size 2035581; 47402
Version 1.2
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage Austria; Denmark; France; Germany; Hungary; Italy; Poland; Spain