We propose a general model of repeated elections. In each period, a challenger is chosen from the electorate to run against an incumbent politician in a majority-rule election, and the winner then selects a policy from a multidimensional policy space. Individual policy preferences are private information, whereas policy choices are publicly observable. We prove existence and continuity of equilibria in "simple" voting and policy strategies; we provide examples to show the variety of possible equilibrium patterns in multiple dimensions; we analyze the effects of patience and office-holding benefits on the persistence of policies over time; and we identify relationships between equilibrium policies and the core of the underlying voting game. ...
I study elections between citizen-candidates who cannot make binding policy commitments before takin...
We present a general model of legislative bargaining in which the status quo is an arbitrary point ...
This paper examines whether policy commitment mechanisms, when available, will be used by the electe...
We propose a general model of repeated elections. In each period, a challenger is chosen from the el...
We propose a general model of repeated elections. In each period, a challenger is chosen from the el...
We analyze a discrete-time, infinite-horizon model of elections. In each period, a challenger is ch...
We model an infinite sequence of elections with no term limits. In each period a challenger with pri...
We introduce a general framework in which politicians choose a (possibly infinite) sequence of binar...
This paper examines whether policy commitment mechanisms, when available, will be used by the electe...
Abstract I investigate the equilibrium properties of a deterministic voting model in which the polic...
I study a model of dynamic policy making in which citizens do not have com-plete knowledge of how po...
We present a general model of legislative bargaining in which the status quo is an arbitrary point i...
This paper introduces a model where elections are games where voters have preferences over a public ...
This paper studies the Markov perfect equilibrium outcomes of a dynamic game of elec-toral competiti...
We analyze a model of \u27postelection politics\u27, in which (unlike in the more common Downsian mo...
I study elections between citizen-candidates who cannot make binding policy commitments before takin...
We present a general model of legislative bargaining in which the status quo is an arbitrary point ...
This paper examines whether policy commitment mechanisms, when available, will be used by the electe...
We propose a general model of repeated elections. In each period, a challenger is chosen from the el...
We propose a general model of repeated elections. In each period, a challenger is chosen from the el...
We analyze a discrete-time, infinite-horizon model of elections. In each period, a challenger is ch...
We model an infinite sequence of elections with no term limits. In each period a challenger with pri...
We introduce a general framework in which politicians choose a (possibly infinite) sequence of binar...
This paper examines whether policy commitment mechanisms, when available, will be used by the electe...
Abstract I investigate the equilibrium properties of a deterministic voting model in which the polic...
I study a model of dynamic policy making in which citizens do not have com-plete knowledge of how po...
We present a general model of legislative bargaining in which the status quo is an arbitrary point i...
This paper introduces a model where elections are games where voters have preferences over a public ...
This paper studies the Markov perfect equilibrium outcomes of a dynamic game of elec-toral competiti...
We analyze a model of \u27postelection politics\u27, in which (unlike in the more common Downsian mo...
I study elections between citizen-candidates who cannot make binding policy commitments before takin...
We present a general model of legislative bargaining in which the status quo is an arbitrary point ...
This paper examines whether policy commitment mechanisms, when available, will be used by the electe...