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Journal of Elections, Public Opinion & Parties

Volume 18, Issue 1, 2008

The Dutch No to the EU Constitution: Assessing the Role of EU Skepticism and the Campaign

The Dutch No to the EU Constitution: Assessing the Role of EU Skepticism and the Campaign

DOI:
10.1080/17457280701858656
Andreas R. T. Schucka* & Claes H. De Vreesea

pages 101-128

Available online: 01 Feb 2008

Abstract

In June 2005 the Dutch electorate rejected the EU constitutional treaty in a national referendum. The current study, which focuses on vote choice and the campaign, draws on complementary explanations for referendum voting behavior. We investigated how attitudes towards the EU influenced the intention to vote No ahead of the campaign as well as the impact of the campaign and the media on the final vote. Therefore, we combined a media content analysis (n = 6,643) with panel survey data (n = 1,379). Results reveal that prior to the actual start of the campaign, existing skepticism towards the EU was the strongest determinant for the intention to vote No and served as a mediator for the influence of other relevant factors such as disapproval of the incumbent government, feelings of national identity and fear of globalization. During the campaign the referendum topic was highly visible in the news with a positive tone towards the Constitution. In this context, higher levels of exposure to referendum news increased the likelihood of voters to switch over to the Yes side.

 

Details

  • Available online: 01 Feb 2008

Author affiliations

  • a Amsterdam School of Communications Research, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group