“…Despite its dominance in the literature on the Global North, however, partisanship has traditionally been seen as a less important driver in Africa, where parties are typically seen as weak, with low levels of support, and a limited capacity to engage with or mobilize citizens (Krönke et al, 2022;Rakner & Van de Walle, 2009;Storm, 2013). A nascent literature, however, argues that scholars have underestimated how quickly citizens attach to parties in new democracies (Brader & Tucker, 2001;Harding & Michelitch, 2021), partisanship in Africa is actually higher than in many other regions, and parties across the continent have a greater mobilizational capacity than previously assumed (Harding & Michelitch, 2021;Krönke et al, 2022). All of this provides good reasons to think that co-partisanship might play a more important role than previously assumed, making it important to test alongside the more dominant arguments.…”