HOW PARTIES ORGANIZE Change and Adaptation in Party Organizations in Western Democracies Edited by Richard S. Katz and Peter Mair SAGE Publications London · Thousand Oaks · New Delhi In memory of Rudolf Wildenmann Editorial arrangement © Richard S. Katz and Peter Mair 1994 Chapter 1 © Peter Mair Chapter 2 © Richard S. Katz and Robin Kolodny 1994 Chapter 3 © Wolfgang C. Muller Chapter 4 © Kris Deschouwer Chapter 5 © Paul D. Webb Chapter 6 © Lars Bille Chapter 7 © Jan Sundberg Chapter 8 © Thomas Poguntke Chapter 9 © David M. Farrell Chapter 10 © Luciano Bardi and Leonardo Morlino Chapter 11 © Ruud A. Koole Chapter 12 © Lars Sv&sand Chapter 13 © Jon Pierre and Anders Widfeldt Chapter 14 © Luciano Bardi First published 1994 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without permission in writing from the Publishers. SAGE Publications Ltd 6 Bonhill Street London EC2A 4PU SAGE Publications Inc 2455 Teller Road Thousand Oaks, California 91320 SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd 32, M-Block Market Greater Kailash -1 New Delhi 110 048 British Library Cataloguing in Publication data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 0 8039 7960 6 ISBN 0 8039 7961 4 (pbk) Library of Congress catalog card number 94-068658 Typeset by Photoprint, Torquay, S. Devon Contents Contributors Preface and Acknowledgements 1 Party Organizations: From Civil Society to the State Peter Mair 2 Party Organization as an Empty Vessel: Parties in American Politics Richard S. Katz and Robin Kolodny 3 The Development of Austrian Party Organizations in the Post-war Period Wolfgang C. Muller 4 The Decline of Consociationalism and the Reluctant Modernization of Belgian Mass Parties Kris Deschouwer 5 Party Organizational Change in Britain: The Iron Law of Centralization? Paul D. Webb 6 Denmark: The Decline of the Membership Party? Lars Bille 7 Finland: Nationalized Parties, Professionalized Organizations Jan Sundberg 8 Parties in a Legalistic Culture: The Case of Germany Thomas Poguntke 9 Ireland: Centralization, Professionalization and Competitive Pressures David M. Farrell 10 Italy: Tracing the Roots of the Great Transformation Luciano Bardi and Leonardo Morlino iv How Parties Organize 11 The Vulnerability of the Modern Cadre Party in the Netherlands 278 Ruud A. Koole 12 Change and Adaptation in Norwegian Party Organizations 304 Lars Svasand 13 Party Organizations in Sweden: Colossuses with Feet of Clay or Flexible Pillars of Government? 332 Jon Pierre and Anders Widfeldt 14 Transnational Party Federations, European Parliamentary Party Groups and the Building of Europarties 357 Luciano Bardi Index 373 Contributors Luciano Bardi Dipartimento di Politica, Istituzioni e Storia, University di Bologna Lars Bille Institute of Political Science, University of Copenhagen Kris Deschouwer Centrum voor Politicologie, Vrije Universiteit Brussel David M. Farrell Department of Government, University of Manchester Richard S. Katz Department of Political Science, The Johns Hopkins University Robin Kolodny Department of Political Science, Temple University Ruud A. Koole Department of Political Science, University of Leiden Peter Mair Department of Political Science, University of Leiden Leonardo Morlino Facolt& di Scienze Politiche, University di Firenze Wolfgang C. Muller Institut fur Staats- und Politikwissenschaft, Universitat Wien Jon Pierre Department of Political Science, Goteborgs Universitet Thomas Poguntke Fakult&t fur Sozialwissenschaft, Universitat Mannheim Jan Sundberg Department of Political Science, University of Helsinki Lars Sv&sand Department of Comparative Politics, University of Bergen Paul D. Webb Department of Government, Brunei, University of West London Anders Widfeldt Department of Political Science, Goteborgs Universitet Preface and Acknowledgements This volume emerges from a long-standing international research project on party organizational change and adaptation. The project was devised with two principal goals. The first was simply to document the nuts and bolts of organizational developments since 1960 in twelve Western democ- racies, and thereby to fill what had been a major gap in the data base from which analysts of party politics have been able to develop their ideas. This goal was largely accomplished in the first volume of the project series, Party Organizations: A Data Handbook on Party Organizations in Western Democracies, 1960-90 (Sage, 1992), which focused almost exclusively on what we called 'the official story', drawing primarily on party and party- related documents and reports in order to outline party rules and structures as well as to record data concerning membership and finance. The second goal of the project, once having established the official story, was to move beyond it by adding politics to the raw data, and hence to understand the contexts in which parties develop their organizational structures and the reasons why they change or why they remain the same. There are two complementary ways in which this problem can be addressed. One is on the basis of a country-by-country analysis, which is the approach adopted in this, the second volume of the series; the other is on the basis of a cross-national analysis, which is the focus of a projected third volume in the series. There are a number of reasons why it is useful to begin with a country- by-country approach. The authors of these chapters were themselves responsible for the original data collection, and so they are particularly sensitive to what these data mean within the different national contexts and to how they should be interpreted. In this sense they are very well placed to offer what might be called the 'real [national] story'. Moreover, while the unit of analysis throughout this project has always been the individual political party, we are also very much aware that each party is part of a party system, and that these party systems are structured on a national basis. Thus while some adaptations in party organizations might be expected to derive from factors which affect most, if not all, Western democracies, such as the mass media revolution or the peculiarities of post- industrial society, and while other adaptations may be specific to individual parties, there nevertheless remain many stimuli to which parties must respond which differ across countries but which are shared by all parties within the same country. In this sense, the national context clearly matters, with different parties within each country being subject to the same Preface and Acknowledgements vii national regulations, operating within the same constitutional and social structures, and sharing the same electoral market. Given that the studies in this volume are the first to use the wealth of systematic empirical data which has been gathered by this project, they offer a unique insight into party development over the past thirty years. It is for this reason that we felt it inappropriate to tie the contributions down by means of strict preconceptions or models. Rather, each of the authors was given a free hand to organize their contribution as they saw fit, and each was encouraged to emphasize whatever was deemed most central to an understanding of the individual cases. For reasons of space, the authors were also asked to avoid reporting details of the data which are already available in the data handbook. At the same time, however, regardless of the individual emphases, a common purpose was asserted by requiring each author to address a number of key questions or themes. Thus the authors were asked to assess the prevailing conceptions of party, both from the points of view of the parties themselves as well as from the point of view of the state, and were also asked to assess the development of parties as membership organizations, which involved looking at the extent of party membership, at the role of ordinary members in party decision-making, and at the relative importance of members to the organization as a whole. Other common themes concerned the development of party as a pro- fessional organization, including the size and organization of party staff and the role of professional advisers and consultants; the development of party finance, with particular reference to the relative importance of the members and of the state as sources of party revenue; and the relationships between the various components of party, with particular reference to the standing of the parliamentary party. More generally, authors were also asked to address the problem of changes, if any, in the relationship between the parties, civil society and the state. The project from which this volume derives was first developed within a Research Group of the European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR), and subsequent meetings of the project members in both the University of Limerick and the University of Leiden were held on the fringes of the ECPR Joint Sessions of Workshops. For both of these reasons, we would like to thank the ECPR for its long-term support. The project was funded primarily by the American National Science Founda- tion under grant number SES-8818439, with additional financial support being provided by the Forschungsstelle fur Gesellschaftliche Entwicklungen (FGE) of the University of Mannheim, as well as by various national foundations. We are grateful to all of these organizations for their generous help. Thanks are also due to our departments in Johns Hopkins and Leiden, which wittingly or unwittingly provided much of the material infrastructure and support which was required to link researchers from so many different countries. Finally, we would also like to record a special thanks for the help which we received from Rudolf Wildenmann, who, in his various capacities as viii How Parties Organize chairman of the ECPR executive, as director of the FGE and as a long- term friend and adviser to us both, offered this project his constant support, both practically and intellectually. Rudolf saw and seemed pleased with our first volume, the data handbook, but sadly died before this particular volume was completed. Like many other political scientists throughout Europe, we owe much to Rudolf, and we now dedicate this book to his memory. Richard S. Katz Peter Mair 1 Party Organizations: From Civil Society to the State Peter Mair Party organizations and the problem of party decline The study of parties and party systems still constitutes one of the largest and most active subfields within comparative politics (for example, Janda, 1993). It is also a study which continues to present an immensely varied landscape, ranging from work which explores the relationship of parties to the wider society, through work which is concerned with the role of parties in government, to work which, often at a more theoretical level, deals with the interactions between parties and with the dynamics of party systems. We now know a great deal, for example, about cross-national develop- ments in the ties which bind, or fail to bind, parties to their voters, whether this be expressed in terms of the stability and change of electoral preferences (see, for example, Bartolini and Mair, 1990; Crewe and Denver, 1985; Dalton et al., 1984), or in terms of the sociology of party support (see, for example, Franklin et al., 1992; Rose, 1974). We also know increasingly more about parties in office, both in terms of processes of coalition formation (for example, Laver and Schofield, 1990; Pridham, 1986), and in terms of the role of parties in policy-making and in government more generally (for example, Budge and Keman, 1990; Castles and Wildenmann, 1986; Katz, 1987; Laver and Budge, 1992). Most recently, comparative analysis has also been addressed to the question of parties as strategic actors and as campaigners (for example, Bowler and Farrell, 1992; Butler and Ranney, 1992). And to all of this work can be added the more wide-ranging and ever-expanding volume of studies on party families and party systems (see, for example, the now dated bibliography in Mair, 1990: 353-60). At the same time, however, there are also imbalances, with the ever- growing cumulation of knowledge in some areas contrasting sharply with surprisingly evident lacunae in others. The empirically grounded study of parties as organizations, which provides the focus for this volume, has long constituted one of the most obvious of these lacunae (see also Katz and Mair, 1992b). This is notwithstanding the fact that much of the pioneering work in the field of party research, by Michels and Ostrogorski in particular, was focused precisely on this area, and also notwithstanding
Description: