The Impact of the Electoral System on Government Formation: The Case of Post-Communist Hungary

Japanese Journal of Political Science 5 (1):159-178 (2004)
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Abstract

Conventional theories of government formation have assumed that the coalition formation process starts after legislative elections are over and the distribution of parliamentary seats becomes common knowledge. This perspective, however, ignores the important constraints that the formation of electoral coalitions may exert on the formation of the government. This article argues that the electoral system of Hungary provides very strong incentives for political parties to build electoral coalitions, which are also identified as alternative governments before the electorate

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