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Revisiting the Sectoral Cleavage in Canada:...
Journal article

Revisiting the Sectoral Cleavage in Canada: Evidence From the Canadian Election Studies

Abstract

According to the budget-maximizing bureaucrat model, public sector employees should rationally seek to increase government budgets to increase their own power. In contrast to most advanced democracies, class and sectoral voting has largely been neglected in Canada. The ideological and voting preferences of the public sector has been unexamined since the 1980s. Using the Canadian Election Study (1968-2019), we revisit and expand on this literature. We find that the public sector holds more economically leftist attitudes than the public and that a sectoral cleavage has emerged, with public sector employees increasingly supporting the leftist New Democratic Party (NDP). We also find that social class moderates these two relationships, as professionals and managers in the public sector are significantly more likely to vote for the NDP and hold more leftist economic attitudes than their counterparts in both the private sector, and the routine non-manual and working class in the public sector.

Authors

Polacko M; Graefe P; Kiss S

Journal

Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie, Vol. 63, No. 1,

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

February 1, 2026

DOI

10.1111/cars.70014

ISSN

1755-6171

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