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Party Democratization and Primaries: Comparative Tendencies and the Greek Experience
Author(s)
Xenophon Contiades
Charalambos Anthopoulos
Pages
19
2009/ Vol. 21, No. 4, (74)
Type
Digital edition
5.00 €

Party Democratization and Primaries

Comparative Tendencies and the Greek Experience

Xenophon Contiades

Professor of Public Law and Dean of the School for Social Sciences of the Uni­­versity of Peloponnese, President of the Centre for European Constitutional Law -
Themistocles and Dimitrios Tsatsos Foundation

Charalambos Anthopoulos

Assistant Professor of Public Law at the Hellenic Open University

 

Primaries are no longer an American particularity. In recent years, the use of pri­maries for the selection of party leaders and parliamentary candidates has become a distinct tendency, among the European party systems as well. The Greek Social­ist Party’s (PASOK) intra-party elections for leader selection, held in 2004 and 2007 respectively, demonstrate that, although the adoption of this method may not be a panacea for the problem of lack of intra-party democracy, it may, nevertheless under certain circumstances, contribute to the encouragement of party members and electors to participate effectively in the party’s internal functioning. Seen in this context, giving motives to the parties, mainly under the form of additional state financing, for the adoption of the primary system, while abiding by certain legislatively predefined guarantees, appears to be the most preferable choice in the field of constitutional politics.

 

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