Eurooptimismi ja euroskeptitsismi vastasseis Euroopa Parlamendi valimiste kontekstis
Date
2012-10-30
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Tartu Ülikool
Abstract
Elections are the cornerstone of a democratic government and low turnout could be
said to be damaging the legitimacy of it. It is therefore important to research the
determinants of voting behaviour. Mapping the distribution of positive and negative
attitudes toward further European integration can show if and how these attitudes
affect turnout.
The purpose of this paper is to map the distribution and prevalence of euro-sceptic
and euro-optimistic attitudes among the voters and non-voters of the 2009 European
parliament elections in order to compare the prevalence of these attitudes among the
member states and regions of the European Union and assess the impact of attitudes
among voters to turnout in the elections. And also to find out attitudes toward
furthering integration differ among the different states and regions of the European
Union.
Analysis showed that Eurosceptic attitudes are more common that eurooptimistic
attitudes in Austria, Estonia, Finland, Latvia and the United Kingdom. These attitudes
were equally distributed in France, Hungary and Portugal. Positive attitudes toward
European integration were more common than negative ones in all other states
examined. Statistical analysis concluded that turnout in states, where eurooptimistic
attitudes are more prevalent that Eurosceptic attitudes, does not differ from turnout in
states where the distribution of attitudes is the other way around.
Eastern Europe and Southern-Europe have the highest number of eurooptimistic
respondents. In only two of the eight regions observed - Northern Europe and Finno-
Ugric nations – were Eurosceptic attitudes more prevalent that optimistic ones.