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Explaining Party Activism: The Case of the British Conservative Party

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2009

Extract

In common with most other mass democratic parties the Conservative party has a large group of active members who sustain the party over time. A model is developed to explain variations in activism within the party, which takes account of the ‘paradox of participation’. The results, based on the first national random sample survey of Conservative party members, show that activism is motivated by three classes of factors. Activism is motivated, firstly, by a variety of selective incentives, such as ambitions for elective office. It is motivated, secondly, by a desire for the party to achieve policy goals. These are ‘collective goods’, which are subject to the problem of free-riding. However, since activists can influence policy outcomes, via their contacts with party leaders, they have high levels of personal efficacy and a direct incentive to participate, which can override the paradox of participation. Finally, activism is motivated by expressive concerns, as measured by the strength of the respondent's partisanship, a motivation for involvement which lies outside a narrowly cast rational choice model of political participation.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

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41 Pilot work on the questionnaire demonstrated that direct questions about personal ambitions for elective office did not work very well, since individuals were reluctant to discuss these. Accordingly, this indirect approach to measuring political ambition was adopted.