The almost inevitable midterm election loss suffered by the President’s congressional party is by now an accepted fact among political scientists and politicians. Several explanations are current. The classic model is that of Campbell (1960) who posits that the weakness of short-term forces in a midterm election causes low-involvement voters from the previous on-year contest to abstain. Kernell (1977) attributes off-year outcomes to asymmetries of behavior on the part of voters, while Tufte (1978) focuses on economic cycles induced by the government
Divided government affects individual choices over how to vote in midterm elections because it incre...
To understand the extent to which partisan majorities in Congress influence eco-nomic policy, we com...
“Previous studies find evidence of an electoral cycle in equity market returns. During four-year pre...
The almost inevitable midterm election loss suffered by the President’s congressional party is by no...
The almost inevitable midterm election loss suffered by the president's congressional party still la...
An intriguing phenomenon in American electoral politics is the loss of seats by the president\u27s p...
Abstract Midterm loss is a virtual truism of American politics. The president's party has dropp...
One mystery of U.S. politics is why the president’s party regularly loses congressional seats at mid...
This paper examines midterm elections in the quest to find the evidence which accounts for the elect...
Conventional analysis of midterm elections is usually in relation to the previous presidential elect...
Reelection and self-interest are recurring themes in the study of our congressional leaders. To date...
Previous empirical analyses of the midterm gap have been unreliable for two reasons: the limited deg...
The paper presents the election results of the Democratic Party in the midterm elections 2010. The c...
We show that senators elected in presidential elections are more ideologi-cally extreme than in midt...
The number of House seats won by the president’s party at midterm elections is well explained by thr...
Divided government affects individual choices over how to vote in midterm elections because it incre...
To understand the extent to which partisan majorities in Congress influence eco-nomic policy, we com...
“Previous studies find evidence of an electoral cycle in equity market returns. During four-year pre...
The almost inevitable midterm election loss suffered by the President’s congressional party is by no...
The almost inevitable midterm election loss suffered by the president's congressional party still la...
An intriguing phenomenon in American electoral politics is the loss of seats by the president\u27s p...
Abstract Midterm loss is a virtual truism of American politics. The president's party has dropp...
One mystery of U.S. politics is why the president’s party regularly loses congressional seats at mid...
This paper examines midterm elections in the quest to find the evidence which accounts for the elect...
Conventional analysis of midterm elections is usually in relation to the previous presidential elect...
Reelection and self-interest are recurring themes in the study of our congressional leaders. To date...
Previous empirical analyses of the midterm gap have been unreliable for two reasons: the limited deg...
The paper presents the election results of the Democratic Party in the midterm elections 2010. The c...
We show that senators elected in presidential elections are more ideologi-cally extreme than in midt...
The number of House seats won by the president’s party at midterm elections is well explained by thr...
Divided government affects individual choices over how to vote in midterm elections because it incre...
To understand the extent to which partisan majorities in Congress influence eco-nomic policy, we com...
“Previous studies find evidence of an electoral cycle in equity market returns. During four-year pre...