Experimental Evidence from Belgium on Local Politicians’ Engagement with Protests
Abstract
When do politicians react responsively to protesters demands? I
argue that politicians react responsively to protests they anticipate
their voters to support — peaceful, large, and actionable protests. In
an experiment with Belgian local politicians (N = 1003), I randomize
protest scenarios that vary how peaceful and large protests are, and
how actionable protesters’ demand is. Results show that peaceful
protests prompt the most responsive reactions, whereas large protests
are more limited to influencing a party’s agenda. However, among
politicians who perceive protesters as their voters (in this case leftwing politicians), moderately disruptive actions still prompt politicians to listen to protesters’ demands. Whether demands are formulated in an actionable way does not affect politicians’ reactions when
compared to abstract demands. This study contributes to understanding when and how politicians are responsive to their constituents in
the case of protests and shows that being peaceful shapes politicians’
incentives to react responsively.
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Date
2024-09Author
Leuschner, Elena
Publication type
article, other scientific
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2024:5
Language
eng