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Raquel Rego & Jeyhun Alizade (N/A). Why do security forces vote for far-right parties? Evidence from Europe. European Political Science Review.
R. T. Rego and J. Alizade, "Why do security forces vote for far-right parties? Evidence from Europe", in European Political Science Review, N/A
@article{regoN/A_1770323400160,
author = "Raquel Rego and Jeyhun Alizade",
title = "Why do security forces vote for far-right parties? Evidence from Europe",
journal = " European Political Science Review",
year = "N/A",
volume = "",
number = "",
url = "https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/european-political-science-review"
}
TY - JOUR TI - Why do security forces vote for far-right parties? Evidence from Europe T2 - European Political Science Review AU - Raquel Rego AU - Jeyhun Alizade PY - N/A SN - 1755-7739 UR - https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/european-political-science-review AB - Concerns are rising over far-right support among security forces, given their role in upholding the state’s monopoly on violence. Such support raises fears that far-right ideologies could shape law enforcement practices and undermine democratic norms. Existing explanations often attribute this alignment to authoritarian and law-and-order preferences. Using data from the European Social Survey, this research note examines whether security forces are more likely than the general electorate to vote for far-right parties and identifies the attitudinal drivers of such support. The analysis finds no systematic evidence that security forces vote for far-right parties at higher rates than the broader population. Moreover, immigration attitudes—not law-and-order preferences—emerge as the strongest predictor of far-right voting across both groups. These findings challenge the common view that security forces are uniquely drawn to the far right for authoritarian reasons and underscore the central role of immigration politics in shaping far-right support more broadly. ER -
English