“…In contrast, when parties enter fixed coalitions, either portfolio coalitions or support agreements, they tend to establish each other as "veto players," so that legislation requires unanimity within the coalition (Tsebelis, 2002). Empirical evidence suggests that when minority cabinets form, it is more likely that opposition parties can represent their voters not only in parliamentary debate but also in actual policy-making (e.g., Angelova, Bäck, Müller, & Strobl, 2018;Ganghof, Eppner, Stecker, Heeß, & Schukraft, 2019;Klüver & Zubek, 2018). The problem is that institutional efforts to stabilize cabinets in fragmented parliaments may discourage the formation of minority cabinets, especially single-party minority cabinets that seek issuespecific support.…”