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Available online: 09 Sep 2009In a broad range of research in comparative politics, political parties are conceptualised as unitary actors with consistent preferences. We depart from this sometimes accurate, at other times overly strong assumption by studying patterns of intra-party heterogeneity of preferences within parliamentary parties in the German Bundestag from 2002–05. For this purpose, we use the Wordscores method, a form of computational text analysis, to estimate policy positions of 453 individual legislators based on plenary speeches. We then study the link between intra-party faction membership and expressed policy positions. We find that there is a limited, but consistent effect of intra-party factionalism in the German Bundestag. According to random effects ANOVA, faction membership determines about 3 per cent of the variance of positions on economic policy in the present study.
Julian Bernauer is a PhD student in the Department of Politics and Management at the University of Konstanz. His main research interests are in comparative politics with a focus on the effect of political institutions (in particular electoral systems), and substantive and descriptive political representation. He is currently working on a dissertation project on the political integration of ethnic minorities in Central and Eastern Europe.
Thomas Bräuninger is Professor of Political Economy at the University of Mannheim. His research interests include comparative politics and political economy. His articles have appeared in the BritishJournalofPoliticalScience, the EuropeanJournalofPoliticalResearch, PoliticalStudies, PublicChoiceand the JournalofTheoreticalPolitics, among others.