10.17045/sthlmuni.8282333.v1
Kirsti M. Jylhä
Kirsti M.
Jylhä
Jens Rydgren
Jens
Rydgren
Pontus Strimling
Pontus
Strimling
Xenophobia among radical and mainstream rightwing party voters: Prevalence, correlates, and effects on voter mobility
Stockholm University
2019
Sociologiska institutionen
Department of Sociology
Xenophobia
Anti-immigrant attitudes
The radical right
Sweden Democrats
The Conservative Party
Voting behavior
Sociology
2019-06-17 08:10:26
Preprint
https://su.figshare.com/articles/preprint/Xenophobia_among_radical_and_mainstream_rightwing_party_voters_Prevalence_correlates_and_effects_on_voter_mobility/8282333
Ethnonationalism and anti-immigration sentiments are increasingly influencing voting behavior in Western countries. This study investigated the role of xenophobia in explaining support for right-wing parties and whether xenophobia correlates with the same psychological variables among voters of a radical right-wing party (Sweden Democrats, Sverigedemokraterna, N=2217) and a mainstream right-wing party (Conservative Party, Moderaterna, N=634) in Sweden. In both voter groups, Right-Wing Authoritarianism was the strongest predictor of xenophobia. Also, Social Dominance Orientation, (less) postmaterialist values, sexist attitudes, (low) Agreeableness, and higher age explained variance in xenophobia. As for voter mobility, xenophobia was more common among Sweden Democrat voters than among Conservative Party voters and, in both voter groups, respondents with high (vs. low) xenophobia had more positive views on the Sweden Democrats. Intended Sweden Democrat (vs. the Conservative Party) voting was predicted by less right-leaning socioeconomic attitudes and higher institutional distrust (among voters with both low and high xenophobia), Right-Wing Authoritarianism and sexism (voters with low xenophobia), and/or male gender (voters with high xenophobia). To conclude, the concept of xenophobia still seems to successfully capture anti-immigrant attitudes, correlates with psychological variables as expected in both voter groups, and helps partly explain the contemporary changes in voting behavior.