AbstractRadical Right Parties (RRPs) have traditionally been seen as 'hard
cases' to forecast, with unstable voter bases affected by short-term
influences. Building upon our previous work on forecasting the French Front
National's vote across time, we construct a comparable model for three
other European countries-Austria, Denmark and Norway-with significant RRPs,
using economic, cultural and political predictors. We find that the model
performs surprisingly well, with the partial exception of Norway, and
provides an accurate forecast of RRP electoral performance which improves
upon naive endogenous models and, significantly, upon polling estimates.
Moreover, the model is firmly rooted in existing explanations of RRP
success, allowing a robust explanation not only of variation in these
parties' votes, but also of less successful estimates in a small number of
country-specific contexts. Overall, we find that standard approaches to
electoral forecasting in fact offer a useful tool in the analysis of RRPs.