Over the past decade, a number of new measures have been developed that attempt to capture the political orientation of both incumbent and non-incumbent candidates for Congress, as well as other offices, on the same scale. These measures pose the tantalizing possibility of being able to answer a host of fundamental questions about political accountability and representation. In this paper, we examine the properties of six recent measures of candidates' political orientations in different domains. While these measures are commonly viewed as proxies for ideology, each involves very different choices, incentives, and contexts. Indeed, we show that there is only a weak relationship between these measures within party. This suggests that these ...
At least two theories have been offered that explain the rise of affective polarization. Some schola...
Would giving party leaders more influence in primary elections in the U.S. decrease elite polarizati...
Primary elections in the United States have been under-studied in the political science literature. ...
I develop a method to measure the ideology of candidates and contributors using campaign finance dat...
A large class of theoretical models posits that voters choose candidates on the basis of issue congr...
Reelection and self-interest are recurring themes in the study of our congressional leaders. To date...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Primary voters are frequently characterized as an ideologically extreme subset of their party, and t...
I argue that citizens alter their views of candidates' ideological and issue positions in response t...
Legislative parties respond to the changing preferences of the citizens they represent through the a...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Scholars and pundits have long noted the dominance of the American two-party system, but we know rel...
Studies of American politics, particularly legislative politics, rely heavily on measures of the par...
Generations of democratic theorists argue that democratic systems should present citizens with clear...
At least two theories have been offered that explain the rise of affective polarization. Some schola...
Would giving party leaders more influence in primary elections in the U.S. decrease elite polarizati...
Primary elections in the United States have been under-studied in the political science literature. ...
I develop a method to measure the ideology of candidates and contributors using campaign finance dat...
A large class of theoretical models posits that voters choose candidates on the basis of issue congr...
Reelection and self-interest are recurring themes in the study of our congressional leaders. To date...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Primary voters are frequently characterized as an ideologically extreme subset of their party, and t...
I argue that citizens alter their views of candidates' ideological and issue positions in response t...
Legislative parties respond to the changing preferences of the citizens they represent through the a...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Scholars and pundits have long noted the dominance of the American two-party system, but we know rel...
Studies of American politics, particularly legislative politics, rely heavily on measures of the par...
Generations of democratic theorists argue that democratic systems should present citizens with clear...
At least two theories have been offered that explain the rise of affective polarization. Some schola...
Would giving party leaders more influence in primary elections in the U.S. decrease elite polarizati...
Primary elections in the United States have been under-studied in the political science literature. ...