4.3 Article

Winning, Losing, and the Quality of Democracy

Journal

POLITICAL STUDIES
Volume 71, Issue 2, Pages 483-500

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/00323217211026189

Keywords

satisfaction with democracy; electoral democracy; winners; losers; abstainers; quality of democracy; motivated reasoning

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Citizens who voted for a winning party are more satisfied with democracy, and this satisfaction varies with the quality of electoral democracy. In well-established electoral democracies, the gap between winners and losers is narrower, as both losers and winners have different levels of satisfaction. This finding has significant implications for healthy democratic systems.
Citizens who voted for a party that won the election are more satisfied with democracy than those who did not. This winner-loser gap has recently been found to vary with the quality of electoral democracy: the higher the quality of democracy, the smaller the gap. However, we do not know what drives this relationship. Is it driven by losers, winners, or both? And Why? Linking our work to the literature on motivated reasoning and macro salience and benefiting from the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems project-covering 163 elections in 51 countries between 1996 and 2018, our results show that the narrower winner-loser gap in well-established electoral democracies is not only a result of losers being more satisfied with democracy, but also of winners being less satisfied with their victory. Our findings carry important implications since a narrow winner-loser gap appears as a key feature of healthy democratic systems.

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