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100 _aAslanidis, Paris
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245 _aCoalition-making under conditions of ideological mismatch: The populist solution
260 _aInternational Political Science Review
300 _a42(5), Nov, 2021: p. 631-648
520 _aThis article problematizes how non-spatial factors facilitate the formation of extraordinary ideologically mismatched government coalitions. An intensive case study analysis of the SYRIZA–ANEL governments in Greece (2015–2019) suggests that a shared symbolic discourse directed against mainstream contenders allowed elite actors with widely disparate programmatic commitments to circumvent rigid constraints imposed by minimal range theory. Under conditions of acute polarization and socioeconomic upheaval owing to the Greek sovereign debt crisis, a strategic use of populist anti-bailout discourse upset the usual order of party competition along spatial dimensions, fostering cross-ideological cohabitation at the executive level between the radical-left SYRIZA and the radical-right ANEL for a total of four years. However, an office-seeking approach based on a populist symbolic framework to represent salient grievances cannot fully eliminate policy dissension. Once core ideological commitments become explicitly challenged, inelastic policy-oriented factions and voting blocs may ultimately precipitate the expiration of the populist coalition.- Reproduced Keywords
650 _aCoalition theory, Populism, Minimal range theory, Greece, SYRIZA
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773 _aInternational Political Science Review
906 _aCOALITION GOVERNMENT
942 _cAR