Category Archives: Blog posts

New article: Coalitions and legislative institutions

Radoslaw Zubek (2025) ‘How Coalitions Shape Legislative Institutions in Parliamentary Democracies’. Journal of Politics. Forthcoming.

Previous work shows that robust legislative oversight institutions strengthen the ability of coalition governments to enforce policy agreements. This raises the question of whether coalitions choose such institutions strategically. In this article, I propose a simple formal model of procedural choice under coalition government and probe its empirical plausibility in a novel analysis of committee procedure reforms undertaken in 14 European parliamentary democracies over more than 60 years. The analysis reveals an empirical pattern which is broadly consistent with expectations. Procedural opportunities to use legislative committees to challenge ministerial proposals tend to be strengthened under multi-party cabinets in which preference divergence between coalition partners is substantial and in which parties have similar probability of making proposals to implement joint policies. These findings open interesting avenues for future work on how parties shape legislative institutions in parliamentary democracies.

Blog post: Introducing UK ParlRules dataset

Together with Tom Fleming and Niels Goet, I have written a post for the LSE British Politics and Policy Blog in which we introduce a machine‐readable dataset of House of Commons Standing Orders between 1811 and 2015. We demonstrate how our data can be used to measure procedural change, and thus substantially advance our understanding of legislative reforms. You can read the full post here.