Nested pyramid structures: Political parties in Taiwanese elections




Mattlin M

PublisherCAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS

united kingdom

2004

China Quarterly

CHINA QUARTERLY

CHINA QUART

180

180

1031

1049

19

0305-7410

0305-7410

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741004000736

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/nested-pyramid-structures-political-parties-in-taiwanese-elections/849096B9BE833DC72591EE47674F64C9



The nature of the political party in Taiwan has been insufficiently problematized in recent writings on the island's elections. Based on field research this article argues that the informal structure of political support in Taiwan takes the shape of nested pyramid structures, built of successive dyadic support relations between politician and supporter and two politicians at different hierarchical levels, culminating in a handful of top political leaders. The political party is only the widest kind of support network, and in lower-level elections not the central agent. The dyads in Taiwan politics differ from traditional patron-client relations in being more dynamic, equal and voluntary. This informal political structure coupled with generally weak party loyalty and large benefits of incumbency produces pervasive party instability and subsequent election instability at higher election levels. The number of top political leaders and relations between them are critical in structuring the party scene.



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