Not exact matches
We can illustrate the political implications of this cultural shift by examining the transitions in
voting patterns of the major religious traditions
between 1960 and 1992.
The differences
between locals, Euros and general election
voting follow a familiar
pattern.
Overall, the Labour seats in these «No» areas show a remarkably similar
pattern to those in Glasgow — the SNP gains are reasonably uniform, but Labour's losses (and hence the swing
between the two parties) are correlated with the size of the 2010 Labour
vote.
In this set of seats there is no consistent
pattern in the difference
between the standard
voting intention question («if there were a general election tomorrow, which party would you
vote for?»)
Part IV uses this framework to assess the different
patterns of
voting on the Canadian and US Supreme Courts and discusses the important normative tradeoff
between deliberation («positive» cooperation) and logrolling («negative» cooperation).