Bringing party ideology back in: do left-wing parties enhance the share of women MPs?
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Publication date
2019
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Cambridge University Press 1743-923X/18 The Women and Politics Research Section of the American Political Science Association,
Citation
Santana A, Aguilar S. Bringing Party Ideology Back In: Do Left-Wing Parties Enhance the Share of Women MPs? Politics & Gender. 2019;15(3):547-571. doi:10.1017/S1743923X1800048X
Abstract
This article analyzes the relationship between parties and the representation of women in Spanish subnational legislatures. We argue that studies on party ideology and gender have generally failed to (a) acknowledge the effect of electoral time: the left started to recruit women earlier, when their number was low and they were mainly perceived as liabilities; and (b) distinguish between two different party mechanisms: parties can be gate openers and ease the access of newcomers to the legislature, and they can be career promoters, which facilitate the parliamentary continuity of incumbents. Drawing on a database containing comprehensive information about the population of regional members of parliament (MPs) (N = 5,353) in 138 elections and focusing on the two most prominent parties, the conservative People's Party and the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party), we test the hypothesis that left-wing parties outperform right-wing parties concerning gender representation. Our statistical analyses show that electoral time blurs the effect of ideology on the share of women MPs. Once time is controlled for, the socialists emerge as systematically recruiting more women. Concerning the two mechanisms, the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party fares better as a gate opener, while the People's Party, unexpectedly, excels as a career promoter.
Description
Haciendo uso de una base de datos que contiene información sobre el universo de los miembros de los parlamentos autonómicos en España en 138 elecciones (N = 5.353), analizamos si la ideología de los dos partidos más relevantes a nivel nacional (PSOE y PP) influye en el número de mujeres en el parlamento, teniendo en cuenta que la literatura sostiene que los partidos de izquierda son más proclives que los de derecha a la hora de favorecer la presencia de éstas en el ámbito legislativo. El análisis estadístico demuestra que el paso del tiempo contribuye a desdibujar el impacto de la ideología partidista: el PSOE destaca por introducir más mujeres en el parlamento (mecanismo de "apertura de puertas"), mientras que el PP lo hace en relación a promover en mayor medida su permanencia (mecanismo de "promoción de carrera").