Hallitus- ja oppositioryhmien suhde eduskunnassa toisen maailmansodan jälkeisellä ajalla




Pajala Antti

PublisherValtiotieteellinen Yhdistys

2011

Politiikka

53

3

214

226

13

2669-8617

https://journal.fi/politiikka/article/view/60118



By definition in a parliamentary system it is justified to assume the government parties to vote almost always in a unitary manner in plenary votes. In a multiparty system it is, however, hard to predict how the opposition groups vote. Few studies analysing government-opposition relations in plenary votes regarding the Finnish parliament were published during the 1960s and 1970s. This study provides similar analyses regarding parliamentary years 1991–2006. Combined the studies provide an insight to the government-opposition relations since the Second World War. The results show
that before the 1990s the government-opposition division in plenary votes appeared rather clear while the political party groups’ positions followed the traditional left-right dimension. Since the 1990s the government-opposition division has become stricter. The government party groups now appear extremely close to each other while the opposition groups are far from the government in a more or less random order. Consequently, the previous left-right dimension is not visible any more.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 15:44