Government Rhetoric and the Representation of Public Opinion in International Negotiations


Journal article


Christopher Wratil, Jens Wäckerle, Sven-Oliver Proksch
American Political Science Review, vol. 117(3), 2023, pp. 1105 - 1122

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APA   Click to copy
Wratil, C., Wäckerle, J., & Proksch, S.-O. (2023). Government Rhetoric and the Representation of Public Opinion in International Negotiations. American Political Science Review, 117(3), 1105–1122.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Wratil, Christopher, Jens Wäckerle, and Sven-Oliver Proksch. “Government Rhetoric and the Representation of Public Opinion in International Negotiations.” American Political Science Review 117, no. 3 (2023): 1105–1122.


MLA   Click to copy
Wratil, Christopher, et al. “Government Rhetoric and the Representation of Public Opinion in International Negotiations.” American Political Science Review, vol. 117, no. 3, 2023, pp. 1105–22.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{christopher2023a,
  title = {Government Rhetoric and the Representation of Public Opinion in International Negotiations},
  year = {2023},
  issue = {3},
  journal = {American Political Science Review},
  pages = {1105 - 1122},
  volume = {117},
  author = {Wratil, Christopher and Wäckerle, Jens and Proksch, Sven-Oliver}
}

Abstract

The role of domestic public opinion is an important topic in research on international negotiations, yet we know little about how exactly it manifests itself. We focus on government rhetoric during negotiations and develop a conceptual distinction between implicit and explicit manifestations of public opinion. Drawing on a database of video recordings of negotiations of the Council of the European Union and a quantitative text analysis of government speeches, we find that public opinion matters implicitly, with the exact pattern depending on governments’ stance toward the EU. Pro-EU governments are responsive to public opinion in their support for compromises and attempts to stall negotiations, whereas Euroskeptic governments tend to remain silent when confronted with a public positively disposed toward the EU. Our results show that although governments implicitly represent public opinion, they do not systematically invoke their voters explicitly, suggesting the public matters but in different ways than often assumed.


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