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Direct Election of Mayors and Quality of Local Democracy in Lithuania

Elections
Local Government
Demoicracy
Mažvydas Jastramskis
Vilnius University
Mažvydas Jastramskis
Vilnius University

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to assess the short-term effects on the quality of local democracy in Lithuania since the introduction of popularly elected mayors in 2015. In the last decades, countries of Western Europe face a decline of political participation and trust in the traditional institutions of representative democracy. New democracies of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) have similar problems. Answers to these challenges try to deepen the democracy by introducing additional elements and expanding them to various levels of government. One particular measure that aims to combat the decline in citizen dissatisfaction is introduction of directly elected mayors. However, question about the effectiveness of this remedy remains: does the direct election of mayors really increase the quality of democracy? Existing literature is inconclusive. Moreover, due to small share of studies on the post-communist CEE countries in the research on local government, region with higher spread of this reform (if compared to the democracies of Western Europe) remains understudied. Lithuania presents a convenient case to test how introducing the direct election of mayors affects the quality of democracy. The major advantage for our study lies in the fact that government adopted institutional reform quite recently (in 2015). It makes Lithuanian case important in two regards. First, it is possible to test if reform brought similar effects as in the established Western democracies. Second, our case contributes to the discussion if such an institutional design increases the quality of democracy in CEE and in general. This paper covers three periods (pre-reform, reform and post-reform) and focuses on the electoral side of the political effects, namely the political participation and accountability. Analysis is based on descriptive statistics and regression models that aim to explain how the political participation and accountability changed after the reform. Preliminary conclusions are that even though participation did not increase significantly, accountability improved somewhat.