Introduction
Policies allowing enfranchisement of non-resident citizens are implemented in the majority of states worldwide. Such rights are often controversial in the homeland. Indeed, the growing number of single case studies or focused comparisons shows that the implementation or reform of external voting rights can be contested among country of origin political parties (Joppke, Reference Joppke2003; Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2013; Paarlberg, Reference Paarlberg2019). However, there is a lack of systematic comparative studies of why different political parties support (or oppose) external voting rights and how these positions are motivated.
The analysis of how and why parties position themselves on emigrant voting rights is an important step towards understanding how not just governments but also political parties face the challenge of democratic linkage with mobile citizens. It contributes to ongoing debates across several research fields. First, studies of state–diaspora relations have only recently begun to compare the role of political parties (Burgess, Reference Burgess2018; Koinova and Tsourapas, Reference Koinova and Tsourapas2018; Østergaard-Nielsen and Ciornei, Reference Østergaard-Nielsen and Ciornei2019a; Paarlberg, Reference Paarlberg2019), but we have still little knowledge of the broader trends in party position and framing of sending country outreach policies. Second, a comparative analysis of party support of emigrant political rights complements the rapidly growing literature on how ideology and party competition influence the position of political parties on immigrant rights (Alonso and Fonseca, Reference Alonso and Fonseca2012; Helbling, Reference Helbling2014). Joppke (Reference Joppke2003) has linked support for emigrant rights with right-wing ideology. However, otherwise such analysis has not been extended to policies towards emigrants and the paper discusses to what extent this framework is applicable to the analysis of emigrant voting rights. Third, a series of theoretical studies has located the arguments for and against external voting rights in broader normative arguments regarding state–citizen relations in a transnational perspective (Nohlen and Grotz, Reference Nohlen and Grotz2000; López-Guerra, Reference López-Guerra2005; Rubio-Marin, Reference Rubio-Marin2006; Bauböck, Reference Bauböck2007). It is therefore relevant to examine to what extent these broader frames are evoked by different political actors during policy debates on external voting rights.
In order to fill these gaps, we unpack the politics of the implementation or subsequent reform of external voting rights at the national level through a comparative analysis of party positions on and framing of external citizenship in 13 European countries [12 European Union (EU) member states and Switzerland]. We develop a framework for analysing the position on and framing of the extension of external citizenship among parties based on both deductive and inductive categories. Subsequently, we create a unique data set based on the coding of a selection of parliamentary debates on implementation or reform of external citizenship. We first analyse the distribution of positions across homeland political parties and estimate the extent to which a series of factors are significant for the positioning of parties. Second, we present an analysis of the frames motivating party position in the same debate. We draw on both primary and secondary data on party support for external voting as well as Comparative Manifesto Project (CMP) indicators on party position on a left-right scale and statistics on electoral results.
Explaining party support
The literature on emigrant voting suggests that broader structural explanations, including enfranchisement as part of the transition to democracy, regional patterns of policy diffusion as well as the leverage of well-organized emigrant lobbies, contribute to the increase in countries granting emigrant voting rights (Rhodes and Harutyunyan, Reference Rhodes and Harutyunyan2010; Turcu and Urbatsch, Reference Turcu and Urbatsch2014; Caramani and Grotz, Reference Caramani and Grotz2015). Some case studies highlight the influence of a particular party, like the National Alliance in Italy, with an interest and commitment to the well-being of emigrants (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2013). We compliment these studies by further exploring in particular two dimensions relevant to understanding why certain parties decide to push for, or at least be in favour of, emigrant enfranchisement: ideology and party competition.
Ideology is a relevant first stop in the analysis of the party position on and framing of particular policy issues. That said, parties continuously renegotiate traditional left-right positions as new issues appear, which cut across ideological divisions related to state-market relations and economic policy positions. One such issue is international migration. This issue is embedded in the broader post-industrial cleavage of open-closed societies (Caramani, Reference Caramani2011). Open-closed societies refers to opposition to or support of the consequences of globalization of the economy, a transfer of sovereignty to intergovernmental institutions or the increase in power of supra-national organizations. While protest parties, anti-migrant parties and neo-populist parties to the right tend to have a clear position on migration, main-stream parties often find it more difficult to position themselves (Odmalm, Reference Odmalm2011).
Yet, although both issues of emigration and immigration relate to the decoupling of the territorial congruence of citizens and states, immigrant rights and emigrant rights are not associated with the same ideological standpoint in the literature. Joppke (Reference Joppke2003) refers to the extension of rights to immigrants as the ‘de-ethnicization’ of citizenship, while the extension of rights to emigrants is labelled a process of ‘re-ethnicization’ of citizenship (Joppke, Reference Joppke2003). His analysis of citizenship reform in Spain, France, and Italy shows that while leftist parties have historically pushed for reforms in favour of immigrant inclusion, the rights of non-resident emigrant citizens have been promoted by the political right. However, a more recent study drawing on a broader global set of data shows that the political colour of the government is not significant for the implementation of external voting rights (Turcu and Urbatsch, Reference Turcu and Urbatsch2014). It is therefore relevant to further explore to what extent the support for increased emigrant voting rights and participation is aligned with a left-right position of the party.
In continuation, it is interesting to compare to what extent the frames which parties evoke to motivate their position relate to their overall ideology and position on other issues. Studies of party positioning on migration have noticed a so-called ‘issue-bundling’ as parties seek to align new political issues with their overall political profile (Bakker et al., Reference Bakker, de Vries, Edwards, Hooghe, Jolly, Marks, Polk, Rovny, Steenbergen and Vachudova2012; Helbling, Reference Helbling2014). Most of the frames related to emigrant voting rights presented below are not immediately partisan (see Table 1). Yet, it could be expected that parties to the right, in particular the radical right, with a stronger nationalist outlook would be more likely to draw on ethnic frames in their support for political rights for co-nationals abroad. Meanwhile parties, mainly to the left, which place a stronger emphasis on immigrant rights would be more likely to refer to the frames related to territorial definitions of the demos or link the support or opposition to extending emigrants rights with voting rights for immigrants with reference to the equality frame.
In terms of party competition, a growing number of studies have questioned to what extent the left-right positioning of parties can explain their stance on immigration by including a more systematic analysis of the dynamics of party competition. The basic argument is that the dynamics and directions of competition within the party system influence the party positioning on immigration policies. For instance, one recent study finds that the existence of a radical right anti-migrant party tends to make the centre-left become more restrictive in terms of the migration political positioning (Alonso and Fonseca, Reference Alonso and Fonseca2012). A similar observation has been made for centre-right parties (Bale, Reference Bale2003). Other studies dispute this argument saying that ideology remains the best predictor of positioning on migration issues among left-wing parties (Carvalho and Ruedin, Reference Carvalho and Ruedin2018).
The argument of repositioning in the face of party competition has also been extended to the analysis of how parties frame their position. Party framing strategies are constrained not by their overall left-right ideological position but by their governmental involvement (Helbling, Reference Helbling2014) and the simultaneous positioning and framing of other parties (Odmalm, Reference Odmalm2011). For instance, Odmalm (Reference Odmalm2011) analyses how mainstream parties in Sweden have had to carefully balance their position on and framing of policies on migration. On the one hand, they may wish to steer clear of a too exclusive position with reference to nationalist arguments, otherwise associated with radical right parties. On the other hand, they may wish to avoid a framing that is too inclusive in the name of international solidarity, otherwise associated with more left-wing parties. Centre-right and left parties will therefore carefully choose issues and frames that are not in tension with their overall position on other issues. They will want to avoid conflicting ideological pulls which can lead to voter backlash and tension within the party.
It is, however, questionable if party positioning and framing on emigrant political rights follow the same dynamics as within the field of migration and immigrant issues. While issues of immigration and immigrant rights have become highly politicized in many EU member states during the last decades, issues of emigration seem much less salient. Radical right parties, which push the agenda on immigration issues, may not pursue emigrant issues with the same intensity and impact on the salience and positioning of other parties. Party competition might be less likely to decouple the link between ideology and support for emigrant voting rights than is the case for immigrant rights.
Finally, the political content of the reform of emigrant voting rights can influence the stance and argumentation of parties. We include a broad set of debates on policies related to different levels and aspects of emigrant enfranchisement. Following the distinction between paradigmatic and incremental policy changes by Hall (Reference Hall1993), we suggest that emigrant policies can be divided according to the degree of change they impose. Paradigmatic policy changes in the emigrant voting rights refer to the recognition/abolition of external voting rights, recognition/abolition of special representation, and expansion/reduction of the type of elections that citizens abroad can take part in. Incremental policy changes include expansion or restriction of length of residence abroad in order to participate in elections or changes in, for instance, voting modality and type of registration.
We explore whether more paradigmatic policy changes could lead to a stronger alignment of party ideology and position, while more incremental policy changes regarding forms of vote and registration could be seen as less controversial and lead to less polarized positions among the parties. Moreover, the set of frames used in the context of debating a paradigmatic proposal to extend voting rights to emigrants for the first time may be closely related to the demos-related and democratic–egalitarian categories of frames outlined above. In contrast, a debate on an incremental proposal whether emigrants should be allowed to cast their ballot through a postal vote or by using the Internet might be closely related to the categories of electoral integrity or efficiency. It is therefore important to be able to connect individual and somewhat technical arguments about external voting to frames that give a specific meaning of what external voting means for those parties.
Research design
The analysis of party positions and arguments related to emigrant political participation and representation is based on the coding and analysis of parliamentary debates on 34 policy proposals in 13 European countries (see Appendix 1 and 3 in Supplementary material).Footnote 1
Regarding the selection of countries, we focus on Western Europe. Countries in this region share broad characteristics of party systems and emigration trajectories compared to, for instance, countries in Central and Eastern Europe which have experienced more intense outmigration patterns since the early 2000s. Even so, there are notable differences among the emigration trajectories and stocks of emigrants among the 13 countries included (see Appendix 1 in Supplementary material). In southern European countries such as Spain, Italy and Portugal, low-skilled labour migrants are still dominating the perceptions of the main emigrant profile, despite different recent outmigration and the presence of several generations of citizens abroad (Lafleur and Stanek, Reference Lafleur and Stanek2017). Importantly, these countries see themselves as emigration countries as well as, more recently, immigration countries. In contrast, most of the other countries in our selection perceive emigration as a sum of individual decisions made by high-skilled workers (see among others Hampshire, Reference Hampshire and Collyer2013 on the UK and Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2011 on Belgium) and have tended to have a rather indifferent expatriate narrative. Ireland is an exceptional case due to the very large-scale historical emigration and the presence of a sizeable Irish diaspora abroad which is still disenfranchised. Germany also differs from the majority of the rest of the cases by seeing part of its expatriate population as Aussiedlers, resulting not from emigration but from historical factors such as border change (Klekowski von Koppenfels, Reference Klekowski von Koppenfels, Rock and Wolff2002).
We seek to identify common patterns of support across different families of parties across these different emigration trajectories and stocks of emigrant voters abroad. In order to do so, we focus on policy positions of parties and MPs and elaborate a set of possible frames to capture the core arguments voiced by MPs in parliamentary debates.
Policy positions on emigrant voting rights
Position in this context refers to the substantive view of the party on a specific issue (Laver, Reference Laver2001; Pogorelis et al., Reference Pogorelis, Maddens, Swenden and Fabre2005; Bélanger and Meguid, Reference Bélanger and Meguid2008). Studies, so far, rely on a variety of sources in order to infer party positions such as party manifestos, expert surveys, voters’ perceptions of party stances or roll-call voting (Krouwel and van Elfrinkhof, Reference Krouwel and Van Elfrinkhof2013). However, the policy area of emigrant citizenship and voting rights is in contrast to issues of immigrant rights, not included in any of the broader databases of party positions currently available. A recent study (at the level of the European Parliament) suggests that parliamentary speeches may also constitute an important source of information for the understanding of the ideology and positioning of parties (Proksch and Slapin, Reference Proksch and Slapin2010). Following this suggestion, we examine the position of parties in a selection of recent debates on the granting or (substantial) reform of emigrant voting rights.
Framing of policy positions on emigrant voting rights
A growing body of literature focuses on how parties frame their position on different policies. In this optic, frames are the set of arguments that a party uses to explain and justify its stance towards a particular policy (Helbling, Reference Helbling2014). The analysis of frames can nuance the understanding of the positioning of parties and may point to linkages with their overall outlook.
Similarly to Helbling (Reference Helbling2014), our strategy to develop frames has been both inductive and deductive. We used past empirical work to identify arguments used in political debates leading to the adoption of external voting laws in Europe and Latin America (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2013). In addition, we have grounded our frame categorization in theories of democratic inclusion and citizenship and the literature on diaspora policies. This combination of inductive and deductive strategy helps us include potentially important arguments a priori while also enabling us to categorize arguments under more general frame categories.
Demos-related frames are those used by political parties to justify their position on external voting based on their vision of what constitutes a cohesive political community. They consist of mobilizing ideas and principles defining citizenship that are used as arguments to assess the legitimacy of granting or refusing citizens abroad a say in home country politics. From the normative theory literature and previous empirical analysis, we can identify three types of demos-related frames.
The first are territorial frames inspired by Dahl’s principle of full inclusion (Dahl, Reference Dahl1989), according to which the demos of a democratic polity comprise ‘all adults subject to the binding collective decisions of the association’ (p. 129). In this frame, the residency requirement is not just a practical limitation to external voting. Actors question the idea that citizens abroad are affected by the laws passed by the representatives they elected (López-Guerra, Reference López-Guerra2005).
Ethnic frames are the second type of demos-related frames and mirror the arguments of those who adopt the territorial frame. It consists of the use of a definition of citizenship based on ancestry that disregards residency and contemporary connections with the homeland as legitimate criteria for the exclusion of citizens abroad from the electorate. Authors such as Gans (Reference Gans2003) have defended the extension of voting rights to citizens abroad because ‘(…) rights are based on the interests that all members of a national group might have in their nationality, and not only on the interests of those who are in fact citizens of the state’ (Gans, Reference Gans2003).
Stakeholder frames represent an intermediary position between the two above-mentioned frames. Scholars like Bauböck (Reference Bauböck2007) and Owen (Reference Owen, Calder, Cole and Seglow2009) denounce the illusion that citizens abroad are not affected by decisions taken in the home country. However, Bauböck (Reference Bauböck2007) considers the principle of affected interest too vague as a basis to allocate political rights. He uses instead the concept of stakeholder, to suggest that beyond having a fundamental interest in the outcomes of the political process, citizens abroad must also have a claim to be represented as participants in that process. For this reason, arguments in favour of external voting that belong to the stakeholder frame may include additional conditions such as a period of prior residence in the home country.
Democratic–egalitarian frames are used to support or reject external voting on the basis of principles that supersede the interests of the nation-state. Political parties use universal principles such as democracy, human rights, and equality as benchmarks to compare their own position on external voting with the external voting legislation of other states that are recognized as equally or more democratic. The underlying objective is thus to demonstrate that their position is the closest to the body of international principles and regulations that they consider define a modern democratic state. We identified two types of democratic–egalitarian frames.
First, human rights frames include arguments on the universal nature of voting rights and posit that the exclusion of external voters contradicts the indisputable right of citizens to regularly express their opinion on the government of their state of nationality. As illustrated by the work of Nohlen and Grotz (Reference Nohlen and Grotz2000), specific arguments in the human rights frame include the idea that the full realization of the principle of universal suffrage commends that citizens abroad be allowed to vote.
Second, equality frames consist of comparing the position of citizens abroad with that of other individuals who also have claims for political participation towards the same state. Most notably, however, equal rights frames are also used to express conditional support in favour of external voting reforms in exchange for legislative reforms in the area of voting rights for foreigners residing in the national territory. Similarly, equality frames may be used to justify restrictions in external voting on the basis that dual citizens could be allowed to vote in the national elections of two countries.
Electoral integrity frames are the third category of frames we identified and rely on the idea that external voting legislation cannot overlook the impact of such practice on electoral processes and emigrants. First, process protection frames consist of opposing or supporting external voting based on its anticipated impact on the reliability of the electoral process as a whole. Electoral integrity frames therefore often mobilize arguments on the level of accountability of actors involved in electoral processes abroad. Second, emigrant protection frames argue that campaigns and electoral processes abroad may trigger positive or negative reactions from the emigrants’ host country authorities. When countries in conflict or post-conflict situations organize elections abroad, these situations often trigger concerns about security or the importation of foreign conflicts in countries of residence (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2013). While a comparable situation is less likely to occur with EU migrants, political parties may argue that homeland voting call the emigrants’ loyalty towards their country of residence into question.
The fourth category of frames consists of utilitarian frames, which approach external voting primarily from a cost–benefit analysis that stronger transnational political connections would generate for the homeland. These frames focus on the expected impact that external voters would have on the home country’s public finances, parties’ performances, and the level of electoral participation (turnout).
Global diaspora frames use migrants’ contributions through remittances and investments to legitimize the implementation of external voting procedures, which often represent a high cost for the public finances. While few countries actually tax citizens abroad, political parties who support external voting may equate the ‘no taxation without representation’ argument to the situation of emigrants who send large amounts of remittances to their homeland but are not entitled to vote from abroad. Less directly, global diaspora frames also posit that granting external voting rights stimulates emigrants’ connections with their homeland and therefore fosters the creation of a global network of citizens abroad who can be activated in the economic or political interest of their homeland (Gamlen, Reference Gamlen2008).
Partisan interest frames are based on the expected electoral gains or losses that the inclusion of external voters is expected to generate in comparison to an electoral process in which voters abroad would not be included. These frames are usually not used by parties to explicitly justify their opposition or support based on the negative or positive impact of external voters on their own electoral performances. Rather, political parties draw on these frames more indirectly to refer to the impact this vote is expected to have on their competitors. That is, the expected electoral gains of competitors can be used as an argument to discredit the adoption of external voting legislation on the basis that it would be guided by partisan interests only. Examples of such practices in Latin America and Europe have been documented in a non-systematic way in Europe and Latin America (see Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2011).
Emigrant-engagement frames are the last type of utilitarian frames and refer to positions on external voting that compare efforts and resources required in implementing external voting reforms with the expected voter turnout abroad. Low levels of participation among citizens residing abroad (or the expectation of it) are often equated with voters’ apathy. Insistence on the emigrants’ unwillingness to make the effort to register and vote thus serves to justify opposition to external voting. Conversely, emigrant engagement frames also refer to arguments that equate low turnout with cumbersome bureaucratic procedures.
Finally we have identified policy learning frames. Recent political science work on the topic has shed light on regional dynamics and processes of democratization as variables explaining the international diffusion of external voting. The work of Turcu and Urbatsch (Reference Turcu and Urbatsch2014), in particular, has shown that the adoption of external voting laws by neighbouring states strongly enhances the likelihood for one state to adopt similar legislation. Looking at the Middle East and North Africa region and Latin America, Brand (Reference Brand2014) and Escobar (Reference Escobar2007) have underlined similar dynamics when noting that the diffusion of democracy in the region has usually been accompanied with trends of diffusion of external voting. Policy learning frames are thus political parties’ positions on external voting that explicitly make reference to the necessity to adopt/reform external voting laws in order to adhere to an international or regional practice deemed to epitomize a ‘modern’ electoral system.
Data and methods
We searched for all policies related to emigrant voting rights between 1980 and 2015 and identified 34 policies with a related debate accessible through the parliamentary online search system.Footnote 2 After detailing all the steps of the legislative process, we prioritized plenary debates at the stage of the second reading in the lower house.Footnote 3 Akin to the method of Closa and Maatsch (Reference Closa and Maatsch2014), the unit of analysis is the statements of MPs during the debates (see also, Pennings and Keman, Reference Pennings and Keman2002; Dolezal et al., Reference Dolezal, Helbling and Hutter2010).
Within each statement we coded (a) the actor and her political party; (b) the direction of the statement [against (1), ambiguous (2), and in favour (3)]; and (c) the justification of the position, that is, both the general and more specific frame used (see Table 1). If an intervention draws on several justifications, these have been coded as separate entries. During the coding of frames, we revised our initial set of frames along the way and included more sub-frames. Consequently, we have recoded for consistency.
One of the methodological challenges is that a party may not have a unitary position on a policy issue (Krouwel and van Elfrinkhof, Reference Krouwel and Van Elfrinkhof2013). In order to overcome this challenge, we have summarized all the positions of MPs from the same parties and averaged the score. Subsequently, we categorized the party position as follows: a score between 1 and 1.66 is coded as against, 1.67–2.33 is coded as ambiguous, while parties who are in favour have a score higher than 2.33. In order to verify this score, we identified all the available roll calls related to the debates. However, such information is only available in 53.8% of the party observations and cannot be included in a systematic manner. We verified that in 69.2% of the cases, our coding aligns with the roll call. In 20.5% of the cases, the party takes an ambiguous position in the debate but ends up voting against or, more frequently, in favour. The final 10.3% are parties that take a more positive view in the debate but end up voting against.Footnote 4
With regard to the explanatory factors of party positions on emigrant voting rights, we rely on the CMP and Parliaments and Governments (Parlgov) databases in order to determine party ideology and party family. Concerning party ideology, we use the variable right-left index (RILE) that constructs an additive measure of left- and right-related statements using factor loadings (Jahn, Reference Jahn2010; Bakker et al., Reference Bakker, de Vries, Edwards, Hooghe, Jolly, Marks, Polk, Rovny, Steenbergen and Vachudova2012).Footnote 5 For an alternative measurement of ideology, the analysis uses a nominal variable on party families as coded in the Parlgov data set.Footnote 6
Besides ideology we control for a series of other characteristics at the party and country level. One relevant party characteristic is government participation. Government parties may be the initiators of emigration-related policy changes and therefore tend to position themselves in favour of these proposals. In terms of variables related to the debates, we systematically analyse the difference between party support for paradigmatic and incremental policy changes. The type of policy change is captured by a dummy variable that takes the value of 1 for paradigmatic changes and 0 for the incremental ones.
An obvious motive for support of emigrant voting rights is the expected electoral return among parties (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2011). Parties have been found to pay more attention to emigrant issues in their legislative work if they receive higher shares of emigrant votes (Østergaard-Nielsen and Ciornei, Reference Østergaard-Nielsen and Ciornei2019b). A recent study based on data from Africa argues that the electoral strategic interest of the incumbent government drives emigrant enfranchisement (Wellman, Reference Wellman2019). However, in the debates on the initial implementation of emigrant rights, emigrants are yet to express their political preference through the ballot box. Moreover, several countries do not keep separate official statistics of the voting preferences from abroad. We are therefore only able to estimate the relationship between support for policies extending emigrant voting rights and emigrant electoral support in 12 debates across seven countries.Footnote 7
The influence of country-level factors on expansive emigrant voting legislation is captured by introducing the strength of the radical right. The total percentage obtained by the radical right at the elections preceding the policy debate is a relevant indicator for its capacity in influencing other parties on emigration issues. We use ordered logistic regressions with country fixed effects and robust standard error (SE) and logistic regressions with robust SE, respectively (Bryan and Jenkins, Reference Bryan and Jenkins2016).
Findings
The policy changes cover a broad range of topics. As illustrated in the list of debates in Appendix 3 in Supplementary material, most of the proposals for paradigmatic policies on emigrant electoral rights (16) refer to the introduction of such rights and, in the case of France and Italy, special emigrant representatives in homeland parliaments. Proposals for incremental changes (18) focus, for example, on extending the limit of years abroad or improving registration and voting modalities of emigrants. All but five of the debates take place from 1990, a fact that assures a certain degree of equivalence of party discourses and positions, in spite of the distinct topics debated. The extent to which these policy proposals polarize political parties varies across the cases. From a total of 145 parties, the majority (74.5%) are supportive of extending voting rights to emigrants, 15.2% have an ambiguous position, while roughly 10.3% are against the recognition or extension of emigrant voting rights. This indicates that across our cases, emigrant voting rights are not always contested.
Party positions on emigrant voting rights
The impact and significance of the factors that influence party positioning are presented in Models 1–4 below (Table 2). Models 1–3 test party-related determinants and use country fixed effects with robust standard errors in order to account for contextual influences. Model 4 introduces the variable on the percentage obtained by the radical right at the most recent election before the debate is analysed.
Robust standard errors in parentheses. * P < 0.10, * P < 0.05, ** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001
The results in Model 1 show that the relationship between right-wing ideology and party position is positive but not significant when we analyse the entire set of debates. However, we find a significant relationship between party ideology and support for the extension of emigrant rights in Model 2, where we observe that the centre-right party family, composed of Liberals, Conservatives and Christian Democrats are significantly more in favour than all other party families. Importantly, as shown in Model 3, the role of party ideology is mediated by the type of policy in question. The impact of ideology measured on a left-right space is significantly stronger and positive in the context of debates introducing paradigmatic changes to the enfranchisement of emigrants and insignificant in the context of incremental changes related to adjusting minor issues of access and voting modalities related to these rights. Thus, the marginal effect of ideology is 0.003 in contexts with incremental changes and 0.01 in the case of paradigmatic policy change debates. When calculating predicted probabilities, we observe that the probability to support external voting rights for a party on the left (rile = −30) is 79% when paradigmatic changes are at stake and 78% in relation to incremental ones. A party on the right (rile = 30) has a probability of 80 to support incremental changes and 85 the paradigmatic ones.
A qualitative analysis of our data corroborates this finding. Parties debating paradigmatic policy changes tend to have more polarized positions than they do in incremental debates. For instance, a series of smaller parties were against the proposal to eliminate emigrant voting rights in local elections in Spain in 2011, while the debate on registration mechanisms in 1995 did not face any opposition.
Against our expectations, the radical right is not a main champion of emigrant political rights (Model 2). This suggests that the radical right anti-immigrant agenda is not necessarily complemented by a generous position towards emigrants. It is worth noting here that though these parties are referred to as radical right, most of them, with the exception of the parties in Denmark and Italy, have a composite RILE score close to zero. Moreover, this result has to be interpreted with caution since our data set only includes seven parties classified as radical right parties across a total of eight coded debates: the Swiss Peoples Party, the Austrian Freedom Party, the Danish People Party, the Danish Progress Party, the Flemish Block, the Flemish Peoples Union, and the National Alliance and the Northern League in Italy.
A qualitative and contextualized analysis of these parties shows a more complex and ambiguous situation of several of the radical right parties. In the case of Italy, the radical right party of the National Alliance was a long-standing advocate for emigrant voting rights (Lafleur, Reference Lafleur2013). However, in the case of Belgium, other electoral interests overshadowed the support for emigrant rights. The Flemish Peoples Union and the Flemish Block were against the implementation of external voting rights in 1998 because this policy proposal was part of a deal between governing parties which also included extending voting rights to non-national residents, which these two parties strongly opposed.
Model 4 indicates that party competition, in the form of the presence of a strong radical right party in a country, does not have any impact on the positioning of other parties. The results show that in countries with higher levels of electoral success of the far right, party support for external voting rights is not higher than in countries where there is a weak radical right presence. This could follow from the observations that the radical right is not one of the main drivers of emigrant voting rights, indicating that this issue does not have the same salience and politicization dynamics as immigration issues.
Finally, most estimations also show that parties in government are more prone to support the expansion of external voting rights regardless of their ideological position. One explanation is that many of the successful proposals are presented by government parties, albeit other political forces support them or have initially suggested them. Emigrant electoral support is not significant for support for extension of electoral rights, but this variable has only been identified for 40% of the cases and hence these results are only reported in Appendix 2 in Supplementary material.
Other unobserved factors at the country level are significant for explaining party support, as country dummies suggest in Models 1–4. Thus, when compared to Italian parties, only Swedish, Portuguese and Austrian parties are more supportive of emigrant political right extensions. In the case of Sweden, this could relate to the fact that this is an incremental debate on introducing postal voting rights, and in the case of Austria, the policy proposal followed a decision of the Constitutional Court to grant voting rights to emigrants.
Party frames on emigrant voting rights
The arguments used by political parties to motivate their support for or opposition to emigrant voting rights cover all the categories of frames presented in Table 1. Yet, there are differences between the frames used in paradigmatic changes and those used in the incremental ones. As shown in Table 3, the demos-related frames are evoked more during debates on paradigmatic changes of policies on emigrant voting (54.6%) compared to debates on incremental changes (45.4%). This is not surprising given that, in particular, paradigmatic policy changes deal with defining the relationship between the demos and political rights. In contrast, parties refer to the democratic–egalitarian frames in the form of principles of universal suffrage and equality among resident and non-resident citizens in both contexts of paradigmatic and incremental policy changes.
Frames related to the category of electoral integrity (process protection) and, in particular, utilitarian frames referring to emigrant engagement and partisan interest are more frequently encountered in debates on incremental policy changes. For instance, in the debates on postal voting in Sweden or Austria, MPs concerned with postal voting referred to the potential impact on the integrity of the secret ballot while arguments in favour of this measure refer to the extent to which it may increase emigrant turnout. Also the frame of partisan interest is slightly more frequent in incremental policy change debates, likely because parties have a better idea about their share of emigrant electoral support than is the case of paradigmatic debates.
Lastly, policy learning frames have mainly been invoked in paradigmatic debates where supporters of extending emigrant enfranchisement refer to the widespread implementation of these rights in other countries. In the 2001 debate in Denmark, the centre-right argues that Denmark is ‘behind’ the rest of Europe in terms of enfranchising citizens abroad. In the Irish debate in 2015, the Sinn Fein MP laments that compared to the 150 countries with emigrant voting rights, the lack of such rights in Ireland ‘is an embarrassment for any government’.
All frames are used to justify positions both for and against extension of emigrant rights but with some important exceptions (Table 4). Framing the access to political rights in terms of the demos-related frame of territorial presence is not surprisingly an argument against voting rights for non-resident citizens, while the ethnic frame is almost exclusively used to justify supportive interventions. For instance, in the UK debate on granting emigrant voting rights in 1985 proposed by the Conservative led government, Labour MPs frequently referred to residential criteria in their opposition to the proposal. A Conservative MP countered with an ethnic framed argument that the overseas voters should be allowed to vote because ‘they are as much British as we are’. The stakeholder argument is mainly used to support extension of emigrant voting rights to emigrants who are somehow involved in the country of origin, though a fourth of the use of this frame is also found in negative or ambiguous interventions. The French Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) representatives and German Liberals consider that in spite of living abroad, emigrants have a meaningful connection with their countries of origin by showing a special interest in staying involved or owning property. Yet, using the same frame, representatives of the French Socialists argue that emigrants do not have a stake in the politics of their countries of origin once they choose to emigrate. In a similar vein, the representatives of both the Spanish Socialist Workers Party and the People’s Party in Spain notice that citizens living abroad do not have any meaningful connection with the localities where they used to reside and should therefore be deprived of local voting rights.
Likewise, the argument that emigrants should have equal rights with co-nationals or immigrants at home is employed in support of both the implementation of voting rights and the forms in which emigrants can cast their ballot from afar. In the case of the Belgian debate on the paradigmatic extension of voting rights to Belgians abroad in 1998, critical interventions warned that the proposed registration and voting modalities put the citizens abroad in a relatively unequal position compared to Belgians living within Belgium. And indeed, the following incremental debate in 2001, provoked by a turnout of only 18 Belgians abroad in the 1999 legislative election, proposed voting modalities more akin to those at home. The arguments related to process protection (electoral integrity) are evoked by parties to justify new types of voting modalities or among parties who worry about the guarantee of basic democratic criteria in cross-border voting. For instance, in the Swiss debate in 2015 on allowing emigrants to vote electronically, both members of the centre-left and centre-right voiced concern with the security and integrity of such a measure.
A cross-tabulation between the frames involved in the debates and party family shows how frames are related to the position of the party on a left-right scale of ideology (Table 5). The most frequently used frame among Communist and Socialist parties is that of demo–egalitarian (40.1% of all frames used) which is a much higher use of this frame compared to other groups of parties. The equality frame (24.8%) dominates within this category as MPs refer mainly to equality with co-nationals but also, in a minority of cases, with reference to the still pending issue of voting rights for immigrants (see below for further discussion). The human rights argument centres on democratic rights as a fundamental right regardless of residence or type of election. This is in line with the recent studies showing that especially leftist parties frame their immigration arguments in terms of human rights (Helbling, Reference Helbling2014). The other main frames used by this party family is the demos-related stakeholder argument.
The centre-left draws on stakeholder and equality frames akin to the leftist group, but their third most used frame is that of process protection. This frame is mainly used to present critical views on proposals for extending emigrant voting rights across both paradigmatic and incremental debates. In a minority of cases, these parties also use the partisan interest and process protection arguments. An illustrative example is the case of the 2008 debate on the representation of French abroad at the National Assembly that provoked critique from the socialist bloc against constituency redecoupage, perceived as a gerrymandering strategy by the UMP.
The centre-right bloc formed by liberals, Christian democrats and conservatives is the group that tends to drive the extension of emigrant voting rights. To that end, MPs mainly draw on frames of emigrant engagement, equality, and the stakeholder argument. Portuguese and French conservatives have been fervent supporters of policy measures that increase emigrant electoral participation. Similarly in Denmark, centre-right supporters for a constitutional change breaking with the determinant principle of territoriality for voting rights argued that in this day and age Danes abroad can be equally informed, sometimes even better informed, about Danish politics than those in the homeland.
Radical right parties are remarkably similar to the rest of the family groups in their use of frames. Interestingly, the radical right does not draw on ethnic frames. Instead their most used demos-related frame is that of stakeholder and in general they use a similar argumentative strategy as the mainstream parties drawing on the frames of equality, emigrant engagement, and process protection. For instance, the equality frame is used by both the National Alliance and the Northern League in the 2001 Italian debate to argue in favour of postal voting modalities and special representation.
Across all party families, the three most commonly used frames relate to the more pragmatic arguments around emigrants as stakeholders, the need for equality among different groups within the polity, and, in particular in incremental debates, reference to the need to increase levels of emigrant engagement. The fact that parties use largely similar argumentative strategies across the political spectrum could be explained by the lack of politicization of emigrant voting rights by these parties.
The debates on emigrant voting rights are only occasionally related to broader concerns with migration and immigrant policies. Interestingly, left, centre-left, and centre-right parties use a different benchmark of equality in their arguments. In the vast majority of cases, the framing of equality refers to the equality between citizens abroad and at home. However, in a minority of cases, MPs link the debate on extension of emigrant political rights with the enfranchisement of resident non-citizens, immigrants. The right-wing Italian National Alliance make this connection by arguing that voting rights for emigrants should take priority over voting rights for immigrants. However, in particular, centre-left and leftist parties argue the other way around that a logical extension of this debate is to also enfranchise immigrants. For instance, in the 2007 German debate on extension of emigrant voting rights, a representative from the Left party commented that it is disproportionate to grant voting rights to German passport holders who have not been around for decades, while denying the same right to immigrants who have been firmly rooted in Germany for decades. This indicates how the framing of support or opposition to emigrant political rights can form part of the broader ideological package of positions on, for instance, immigrant rights.
Conclusions
This article sets out to explore the extent to which party support for emigrant voting rights is linked to their ideological outlook and dynamics of party competition. Our findings show that in the case of paradigmatic policy changes on emigrant voting rights, party support is correlated with the overall ideological outlook. Compared to other party families, the centre-right (Christian-Democratic, Conservative and Liberal) is significantly more likely to support the enfranchisement of emigrants or legislative proposals that make it easier for emigrants to cast their vote. Meanwhile the left and centre-left are not the main drivers of emigrant enfranchisement across our cases. Any internationalist outlook among these parties does not translate into a relatively stronger support for the strengthening of transnational political relations with citizens abroad. The link between centre-right party ideology and support for political inclusion of emigrants confirms the argument of re-ethnicization of citizenship associated mainly with the right (Joppke, Reference Joppke2003). However, it stands in contrast to a recent broader global study (Turcu and Urbatsch, Reference Turcu and Urbatsch2014) which does not find that the political colour of the government is significant for whether a country enfranchises its emigrants or not. Our paper differs from both of these studies by tracing the level of support among all participating parties in 13 countries within the EU and by including also debates on reform of already existing legislation on voting rights. Further comparative analysis can explore to what extent the findings based on the European countries in this study extend to other parts of the world.
The extent to which party positioning and framing on emigrant voting rights is modified by party competition does not seem to follow the recent findings on similar dynamics regarding immigrant rights. In particular, our analysis indicates that an opposition to immigrant rights among radical right parties is not matched by a strong support for more emigrant rights. More contextualized studies could unpack to what extent radical right parties take up the theme of emigrant rights in broader national debates or to what extent the overall salience of the issue of emigrant rights is related to the presence of a radical right party. Finally, this could also be related to the fact that the issue of emigrant voting rights does not seem to be all that contested across our cases. The majority of parties are in favour and there are several incremental and even paradigmatic debates where all parties agree to extend emigrant voting rights.
In terms of framing, our findings allow us to point to a more complex understanding of emigrant rights across the different party families. We show that party support for ‘re-ethnicization’ of citizenship is not framed in ethnic terms to a very large extent and the centre-right barely evokes it at all. This is the case across both paradigmatic and incremental policy proposals. Instead, supportive arguments centre on the notion of emigrants as stakeholders, the importance of removing bureaucratic and logistical obstacles for voting and the injustice of citizens abroad not being equal to that of citizens at home. This illustrates how the framing is conducted with reference to arguments that are less controversial than the term ‘ethnic’ and instead signals a more pragmatic attitude to the democratic challenge of having part of the electorate (or potential electorate) residing abroad. Another frequently used set of arguments relate to democratic– egalitarian frames. Interestingly the human rights frame based on a universalist understanding of political enfranchisement is equally favoured by the leftist and centre-right parties. Yet, the equality argument is interpreted differently in the sense that the centre-right argues for equality among co-nationals while the left, in a minority of cases, also associates emigrant voting rights with the need for extending the enfranchisement of immigrants.
The overall pattern of positioning indicates how parties are, to different degrees, navigating the policy debates on emigrant voting according to their overall political profile but without a strong explicit linkage to their position on issues of immigrant rights and nationalism. The analysis of the framing similarly shows a strong prevalence for frames related to stakeholders, equality, and turnout rates rather than frames related to ethnic belonging. Hence, analysing the position and framing of parties in relation to emigrant voting rights presents a more complex and nuanced but also more complete understanding of how parties face the challenge of democratic linkage with mobile citizens.
Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the project Emigrant Political Incorporation (EMINCOR) (H2020-MSCA-IF-660571-2014) and the project Migration and Transnational Social Protection in (post) crisis Europe’ (MiTSoPro) (ERC Starting Grant No. 680014). We extend a special thanks to our research assistants Nicolas Fliess and Sophie Schneider as well as the referees and discussants in the conferences of the CES, EUDO and Globalcit and the IBEI seminar series.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755773919000171