With a Little Help from the Opposition? Relaxing Term Limits in the Argentine Provinces, 1983-2017/?Con una Mano de la Oposicion? Introduciendo la Reeleccion Ejecutiva en las Provincias Argentinas, 1983-2017
How do incumbents manage to relax term limits when they cannot impose their preferences unilaterally? Interpreting constitutional reforms as a bargaining game between a term-limited executive and the opposition, we argue that reforms involving term limits should be more likely when (a) the incumbent...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of politics in Latin America 2017-12, Vol.9 (3), p.49 |
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description | How do incumbents manage to relax term limits when they cannot impose their preferences unilaterally? Interpreting constitutional reforms as a bargaining game between a term-limited executive and the opposition, we argue that reforms involving term limits should be more likely when (a) the incumbent party can change the constitution unilaterally, or (b) the opposition is pessimistic about its future electoral prospects; moreover, (c) this second effect should be stronger when a single opposition party has veto power over a reform because this precludes the executive from playing a "divide-and-rule" strategy. We examine these claims with data from the Argentine provinces between 1983 and 2017. In line with expectations, the results show that the probability of initiating a reform is highest when the executive's party controls a supermajority of seats, but falls sharply when a single opposition party has veto power over a reform and this party expects to do well in the next executive election. |
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Interpreting constitutional reforms as a bargaining game between a term-limited executive and the opposition, we argue that reforms involving term limits should be more likely when (a) the incumbent party can change the constitution unilaterally, or (b) the opposition is pessimistic about its future electoral prospects; moreover, (c) this second effect should be stronger when a single opposition party has veto power over a reform because this precludes the executive from playing a "divide-and-rule" strategy. We examine these claims with data from the Argentine provinces between 1983 and 2017. In line with expectations, the results show that the probability of initiating a reform is highest when the executive's party controls a supermajority of seats, but falls sharply when a single opposition party has veto power over a reform and this party expects to do well in the next executive election.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1868-4890</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1868-4890</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Sage Publications Ltd. (UK)</publisher><subject>Analysis ; Argentina ; Elections ; Political aspects ; Political parties ; Political reform</subject><ispartof>Journal of politics in Latin America, 2017-12, Vol.9 (3), p.49</ispartof><rights>COPYRIGHT 2017 Sage Publications Ltd. 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In line with expectations, the results show that the probability of initiating a reform is highest when the executive's party controls a supermajority of seats, but falls sharply when a single opposition party has veto power over a reform and this party expects to do well in the next executive election.</description><subject>Analysis</subject><subject>Argentina</subject><subject>Elections</subject><subject>Political aspects</subject><subject>Political parties</subject><subject>Political reform</subject><issn>1868-4890</issn><issn>1868-4890</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2017</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>KPI</sourceid><recordid>eNptkN1qwkAQhUNpodb2HQZ6VWja3fxurkTEVqlFEaGXsm4mcSXZlexGfMu-UldbQaHMxQxzvjkH5srrUJYwP2IZuT6bb707YzaEJEkSk473_SXtGjhMpLUVwgirLRSNrsGuEabbrTbSSq16MMeK76UqYYFN7fBaWgNSHbl-U6KyUiHMGr2TSqB5Bpqx0A8ITV97A62gVRw-udKQI1TcWTtncXQeK9vovBUSVa4P2hyxQnEQYbhB0Vq544DKSeYUIN14SuXnYffeTcErgw9_vest3oaLwcifTN_Hg_7ELymh1I9ZkYhUFEG64oEIkRMSZVlAWRCvSJKnaUBFEbEwphiyLCTCMSio4EkUCLoKu97jr23JK1xKVWjbcFFLI5b9OIyy2D2XOurlH8pVjrUUWmEh3f7i4OniwDEW97bkrTHLj9n4nP0BlbOSog</recordid><startdate>20171201</startdate><enddate>20171201</enddate><creator>Lucardi, Adrian</creator><creator>Almaraz, Maria Gabriela</creator><general>Sage Publications Ltd. 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Relaxing Term Limits in the Argentine Provinces, 1983-2017/?Con una Mano de la Oposicion? Introduciendo la Reeleccion Ejecutiva en las Provincias Argentinas, 1983-2017</atitle><jtitle>Journal of politics in Latin America</jtitle><date>2017-12-01</date><risdate>2017</risdate><volume>9</volume><issue>3</issue><spage>49</spage><pages>49-</pages><issn>1868-4890</issn><eissn>1868-4890</eissn><abstract>How do incumbents manage to relax term limits when they cannot impose their preferences unilaterally? Interpreting constitutional reforms as a bargaining game between a term-limited executive and the opposition, we argue that reforms involving term limits should be more likely when (a) the incumbent party can change the constitution unilaterally, or (b) the opposition is pessimistic about its future electoral prospects; moreover, (c) this second effect should be stronger when a single opposition party has veto power over a reform because this precludes the executive from playing a "divide-and-rule" strategy. We examine these claims with data from the Argentine provinces between 1983 and 2017. In line with expectations, the results show that the probability of initiating a reform is highest when the executive's party controls a supermajority of seats, but falls sharply when a single opposition party has veto power over a reform and this party expects to do well in the next executive election.</abstract><pub>Sage Publications Ltd. (UK)</pub><tpages>42</tpages></addata></record> |
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source | DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Sage Journals GOLD Open Access 2024; EBSCOhost Political Science Complete; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals |
subjects | Analysis Argentina Elections Political aspects Political parties Political reform |
title | With a Little Help from the Opposition? Relaxing Term Limits in the Argentine Provinces, 1983-2017/?Con una Mano de la Oposicion? Introduciendo la Reeleccion Ejecutiva en las Provincias Argentinas, 1983-2017 |
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