Abstract
Local context is widely believed to influence voting behavior with, for example, the voters' evaluation of the state of their local economy affecting whether they choose to reward or punish the incumbent government. Such reward-punish models apply in the United Kingdom at the national scale: those who believe that the government has delivered prosperity vote for its return, whereas those who believe that its policies have produced a worsening economic situation vote against it. This article shows that the operation of this calculus varies spatially, according to the level of unemployment in the voter's home area: the higher the local level of unemployment the lower the probability of someone who thought that government polices had delivered national prosperity voting for the incumbent government. It also shows that this is a consequence of cross-pressured situations. Those who thought that the government's policies had delivered both national and local prosperity were very likely to vote for it; those who thought that the policies had delivered national but not local prosperity were less likely to vote for it—especially in areas of high unemployment.
Similar content being viewed by others
REFERENCES
Atkinson, L. R., and Partin, R. W. (1995). Economic and referenda voting: a comparison of gubernatorial and senatorial elections. American Political Science Review 89: 99–107.
Books, J., and Prysby, C. (1999). Contextual effects on retrospective economic evaluations: the impact of the state and local economy. Political Behavior 21: 1–16.
Dunleavy, P. (1979). The urban basis of political alignment: social class, domestic property ownership and state intervention in consumption processes. British Journal of Political Science 9: 409–443.
Evans, G., Curtice, J., and Norris, P. (1998). New Labour, new tactical voting? The causes and consequences of tactical voting in the 1997 general election. In D. Denver, J. Fisher, P. Cowley, and C. Pattie (eds.) British Elections and Parties Review 8: The 1997 General Election, pp. 65–79. London: Frank Cass.
Farrell, D. M., McAllister, I., and Studlar, D. T. (1998). Sex, money and politics: sleaze and the Conservative party in the 1997 election. In D. Denver, J. Fisher, P. Cowley, and C. Pattie (eds.), British Electionsand PartiesReview 8: The 1997 General Election, pp. 80–95. London: Frank Cass.
Harrop, M., Heath, A., and Openshaw, S. (1991). Does neighbourhood influence voting— and why? In I. Crewe, P. Norris, D. Denver, and D. Broughton (eds.), British Electionsand PartiesYearbook 1991, pp. 103–122. Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
Johnston, R. J., and Pattie, C. J. (1998). Composition and context: region and voting in Britain revisited during Labour's 1990s' revival. Geoforum 29: 309–329.
Johnston, R. J., Pattie, C. J. and Allsopp, J. G. (1988). A Nation Dividing? Britain's Changing Electoral Map 1979–87. London: Longman.
Johnston, R. J. et al. (1997) Spatial variations in voter choice: modelling tactical voting at the 1997 general election in Great Britain. Geographical and Environmental Modeling 1: 153–179.
Johnston, R. J. et al. (1998). New Labour landslide—same old electoral geography? In D. Denver, J. Fisher, P. Cowley, and C. Pattie (eds.), British Elections and Parties Review 8: The 1997 General Election, pp. 35–64. London: Frank Cass.
Lewis, J., and Townsend, A. R., eds. (1989). The North-South Divide: Regional Change in Britain in the 1980s. London: Paul Chapman Publishers.
McAllister, I., and Studlar, D. T. (1992). Region and voting in Britain: territorial polarization or artifact? American Journal of Political Science 36: 168–199.
Miller, W. E., and Shanks, J. M. (1996). The New American Voter. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.
Miller, W. L. (1978). Social class and party choice in England: a new analysis. British Journal of Political Science 8: 257–284.
Pattie, C. J., Dorling, D. F. L. and Johnston, R. J. (1997). The electoral geography of recession: local economic conditions, public perceptions and the economic vote in the 1992 British general election. Transactions, Institute of BritishGeographers NS22: 147–161.
Pattie, C. J., and Johnston, R. J. (1995). 'It's not like that round here': region, economic evaluations and voting at the 1992 British general election. European Journal of Political Research 28(1): 1–32.
Sanders, D. (1997). The new electoral battleground. In A. King (ed.), New Labour Triumphs: Britain at the Polls pp. 209–248. Chatham NJ: Chatham House.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Johnston, R., Pattie, C., Dorling, D. et al. Local Context, Retrospective Economic Evaluations, and Voting: The 1997 General Election in England and Wales. Political Behavior 22, 121–143 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1006655300380
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1006655300380