4.4 Article

Avoiding or engaging problems? Issue ownership, problem indicators, and party issue competition

Journal

JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN PUBLIC POLICY
Volume 30, Issue 12, Pages 2854-2885

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2022.2135754

Keywords

Issue ownership; problems; party competition; issue overlap; problem indicators

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Competition theories suggest that political parties emphasize different issues, but empirical studies find overlap in their issue emphasis. This paper argues that the severity of problems affects parties' attention to issues, with severe problems leading to a unified focus across parties. This has positive implications for parties' responsiveness to societal problems.
Issue competition theories posit that political parties have little incentive to emphasize the same issues, because they mostly benefit from emphasizing issues where they are viewed as more competent. In contrast, a number of empirical studies find considerable overlap in parties' issues emphasis. Aiming to bridge this peculiar gap, this paper suggests that the development of exogenous problems is one factor that constrains parties' incentives to talk past each other. Using comprehensive data on party attention to ten issues across six West European countries from approximately 1980 and onwards, the analysis shows that problems moderate the relationship between parties' issue reputations and their issue emphases. When problems are moderate, parties selectively focus on different issues, but when problems become severe, parties across the board attend to an issue. That even includes parties that do not own the issue. These results have reassuring implications for parties' responsiveness to societal problems that negatively affect the welfare of citizens.

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