Title: The media, interest groups, and Veto Players
1The media, interest groups, and Veto Players
Lecture 8
2Objectives
- Objectives
- to understand the importance of veto players
- to grasp the influence of media, interest groups
and public opinion
3Introduction
- Modern politics new players, new strategies, new
approaches - The media the fourth estate/power?
- Interest group representation and lobbying how
democratic is it? - Veto players a new (mid-1990s) approach in
comparative politics
4Media and Democracy
- Democracy relies on communication
- Mass literacy as a function, achievement and
affirmation of the modern state - Media democracy
- Media as link between politicians, parties and
electorate - Influence of the media through agenda setting,
opinion polls, investigative journalism and news
filtering - Media as part of the game not independent
- Political control over mass communication
sensitive issue
5Mediatization of Politics
- Professionalization of politics towards media
- Media training for politicians
- Political statements fit media formats
- Spin doctors
- Media as main tool for campaigns
- Elections are to be won on TV
- Visibility more important than manifestos
- TV duels
- Presidentialization
- Personalization of politics
- Political management replaces ideology
- Focus on charismatic leadership
6Media and politics in WE
-
- Considerable variations between countries in
media use, ownership and regulation - However, all combine commercial systems with more
or less independent public broadcasting - Politicians and the media mutually dependent
and antagonistic (clash of interests) - Imbalances
- Berlusconi dominates Italian media sector
- Kirch and Murdoch as international media traders
7Media environment has changed
- increasingly fragmented and commercialized
- Public vs private ownership struggle
- Emergence of multinational consortiums
- Threat of Monopolization
All over the continent, stories have much more a
chance of seeing the light if they are visual,
emotive, conflictual, intense, unambiguous, of
majority relevance, unpredictable and apparently
capable of common-sense solution. Bale, 2005,
p. 160
8Are these entirely new phenomena?
9Influence of the Media
- TV the primary medium politicians care most about
(biggest reach and effect) - Like radio, it is generally a more trusted source
than the press - Evidence for media influence on election outcomes
is thin - Media (and campaigning more generally) could
become more important as voting becomes more
volatile - Role in setting agendas and enhancing the
salience of some concerns over others is probably
more important than any direct effect
10Limitations of Media Influence
- New Information technologies not much impact on
conventional politics - General decline of political interest
- Number of newspaper readers shrinking
- Young adults increasingly ignorant of political
debates - Regulation through governments and EU
- Importance of public sector
- Part of political culture and education
- Market regulation through the EU
- Media may be influential as short-term causes for
voting - But rather reinforces than changes party
preferences
11Public opinion
- Tools of Representative and direct democracy
- Allows immediate assessment of popularity
- (of decisions)
- Keeps the politicians in contact with electorate
- Represents public interest in decision-making
- Problem
- Public lacks knowledge and can evade trade-offs
- Limits on detailed and complex issues
- US-style Politics-by-Polls imported to Europe
- Politicians become obsessed with surveys
- Neglects inaccuracy of empirical and statistical
methods
12INTEREST GROUPS
- Highly organized groups within society with a
particular interest (industrialists, farmers,
workers, environmentalists, churches etc.) - Functional rather than electoral representation
- Become increasingly internationalized (esp. EU)
13INTEREST GROUPS
- Influence through lobbying,, provision of
arguments and material, publicity, political
action - Decision-making in pluralist democracies
- Needs to take into account divergent interests
within society - Needs to reflect preferences of main economic
sectors and players - cannot neglect minority positions
- The state as a referee of group competition or as
the executive of major group interests?
14Rules of Lobbying
- Develop good advance intelligence (helps you
prepare response) - Watch domestic agendas
- Lobby early (80 too late)
- Stay in the whole race
- Maintain good links
- with government officials
- with national officials in international
organizations and the EU - with the parliament
- Present rational, technical arguments (rather
than emotional ones) - Be co-operative, positive and trustworthy
15Trade Union membership, organization and power in
WE
16Tsebelis, Decision Making in Political Systems
- Compare democratic political systems in terms of
policy stability/change - Regime type (presidentialism vs. parliamentarism)
and party systems (two vs. many parties) are the
crucial ways by which democratic political
systems matter. - However, how do you compare multivariate
political systems (eg. USA presidential,
two-party system with Denmark parliamentary,
multi-party system)?
17Tsebelis, Decision-Making
- Focus on legislative status quo (current
policies) - Veto players (person or group whose assent is
necessary to change the legislative status quo)
are central - Each veto player can
- Prevent changes (status quo persists)
- Demand a price for assent
- Institutional vetoers (e.g., president, chamber)
and parties (partisan vetoers) are the crucial
veto players
18Policy Space in WE
L
SPD
Status Quo
C
S
CDU
A
19Tsebelis, Decision-Making
- Each political system has its own veto-player
configuration - Change is less likely as
- The number of veto players increases
- Congruence of policy preferences among veto
players decreases - Cohesion (internal policy agreement) decreases
- Win set
- Set of points that could replace status quo
- Size of win set is key to stability
20Tsebelis, Decision-Making
- As number of players increases, the winset of the
status quo does not increase. - As distance among veto players increases along
the same line, the winset does not increase. - Policy stability ? government regime stability
- If we know the preferences of veto players, the
position of the status quo, and the identity of
the agenda setter (the sequence of moves of the
different actors), we can predict the outcome of
the policymaking
http//www.pupress.princeton.edu/chapters/i7419.ht
ml
21Tsebelis, Decision-Making
- Number of veto players
- Two vs. multi-party systems
- Parliamentary vs. presidential systems
- Unitary vs. Federal systems
- Powerful interest groups / public opinion
(referenda) - Countries with many veto players Italy high
policy stability (low government stability) - Countries with few veto players Greece low
policy stability (high government stability)
http//www.pupress.princeton.edu/chapters/i7419.ht
ml
22Tsebelis, Veto Players and Law Production in
Parliamentary Democracies
- Empirical tests of the following hypotheses
- Increase in the number of parties in government
reduces the ability to produce significant
legislation. - Increase in ideological distance reduces the
ability to produce significant legislation. - Number of sig. laws increase with government
duration. - Number of sig. laws increases with increasing
distance between the current and preceding
governments.
23Summary
- Politics is not just about parliaments,
governments, parties and voters - In liberal democracies, interest groups and the
media play an important and legitimate role - Political actors may be influential
- Not because they can singlehandedly achieve their
goals - But because they can veto changes to the status
quo - Veto play analysis important new tool for
comparative politics