vetospieler
Vetospieler, in political science often translated as veto player, denotes an individual or collective actor whose consent is necessary to change public policy. The concept was developed by George Tsebelis in his 2002 work Veto Players: How Political Institutions Work and is used to explain why some systems resist major policy change while others move more easily. A vetospieler can be an institution—such as a president with a veto, a prime minister and cabinet, a legislature, or a constitutional court—or an organized political actor outside the formal government, like a political party or a coalition partner, that has the power to block proposals.
Policy change requires forming a coalition of veto players whose combined positions support the new policy
Veto players are used to compare political systems, assess constitutional design, and explain variation in policy