Replication Data for: Why Parties Displace Their Voters: Gentrification, Coalitional Change and the Demise of Public Housing
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https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/EAPKQX
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Replication files for "Why Parties Displace Their Voters: Gentrification, Coalitional Change and the Demise of Public Housing." Abstract: Across advanced economies, affordable housing shortages are pushing low-income voters out of cities. Left governments frequently exacerbate these shortages by eliminating public housing. Why does the Left pursue policies that displace its voters? We argue that the Left's long-term rebalancing towards the middle class and away from an increasingly stigmatized ``underclass'' has significantly attenuated the tradeoffs inherent in reducing affordable housing. Focusing on Britain, we demonstrate that, by alienating low-income voters politically and reshuffling them across districts, housing crises have significant costs for Labour. Yet, drawing on interviews, we show that displacement is nonetheless compatible with electoral interests: the displaced make room for richer voters who politicians believe will also support Labour. A quantitative analysis of Greater London's 32 local authorities and 624 wards further documents trends in line with coalitional rebalancing. Taken together, our study demonstrates that electoral foundations are key to understanding housing crises and gentrification.
创建时间:
2021-02-24



