In this article, we use a regression discontinuity design to estimate the causal effect of incumbency on campaign contributions in the U.S. House and state legislatures. In both settings, incumbency causes approximately a 20-25 percentage-point increase in the share of donations flowing to the incumbent's party. The effect size does not vary with legislator experience and does not appear to depend on incumbent office-holder benefits. Instead, as we show, the effect is primarily the result of donations from access-oriented interest groups, especially donors from industries under heavy regulation and those with less ideological ties. Given the role of money in elections, the findings suggest that access-oriented interest groups are an importa...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
This Note addresses the long-standing discrepancy between scholarly support for the effect of consti...
This paper estimates the effects of incumbent spending and challenger spending in U.S. House electio...
In this article, we use a regression discontinuity design to estimate the causal effect of incumbenc...
In a campaign spending contest model, this paper investigates whether the sources of incumbency adv...
Replication of Fouirnaies and Hall's 2014 study, "The Financial Incumbency Advantage: Causes and Con...
In a campaign spending contest framework, we investigate the potency of frequently cited sources of ...
We develop a model that calls into question whether some key sources of incumbency advantage frequen...
In the last twenty years, scholars have scrutinized the electoral advantages conferred by incumbency...
Abstract: Most campaigns do not revolve around policy commitments; instead, we think of campaigns as...
Have electoral reforms to reduce the incumbency advantage worked as intended? I articulate a theory ...
Theory: A simple rational entry argument suggests that the value of incumbency consists not just of...
Donors influence state policy development through campaign contributions to legislative candidates. ...
I examine the funding of election candidates by special interest groups and parties in the context o...
Legislative scholars have investigated both the growth in the incumbency advantage since the early 1...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
This Note addresses the long-standing discrepancy between scholarly support for the effect of consti...
This paper estimates the effects of incumbent spending and challenger spending in U.S. House electio...
In this article, we use a regression discontinuity design to estimate the causal effect of incumbenc...
In a campaign spending contest model, this paper investigates whether the sources of incumbency adv...
Replication of Fouirnaies and Hall's 2014 study, "The Financial Incumbency Advantage: Causes and Con...
In a campaign spending contest framework, we investigate the potency of frequently cited sources of ...
We develop a model that calls into question whether some key sources of incumbency advantage frequen...
In the last twenty years, scholars have scrutinized the electoral advantages conferred by incumbency...
Abstract: Most campaigns do not revolve around policy commitments; instead, we think of campaigns as...
Have electoral reforms to reduce the incumbency advantage worked as intended? I articulate a theory ...
Theory: A simple rational entry argument suggests that the value of incumbency consists not just of...
Donors influence state policy development through campaign contributions to legislative candidates. ...
I examine the funding of election candidates by special interest groups and parties in the context o...
Legislative scholars have investigated both the growth in the incumbency advantage since the early 1...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
This Note addresses the long-standing discrepancy between scholarly support for the effect of consti...
This paper estimates the effects of incumbent spending and challenger spending in U.S. House electio...