Primary voters are frequently characterized as an ideologically extreme subset of their party, and thus partially responsible for increasing party polarization in government. We use a combination of administrative records on primary turnout and five recent surveys from 2008-2014 to show that primary voters are similar to rank and file voters in their party in terms of demographic attributes and policy attitudes. These similarities do not vary depending on the openness of the primary. Our results suggest that the composition of primary electorates does not exert a polarizing effect above what might arise from voters in the party as a whole
The observed rate of Americans voting for a different party across successive presidential elections...
Would giving party leaders more influence in primary elections in the U.S. decrease elite polarizati...
In an effort to break the link between districts' lack of competitiveness and the election of ideolo...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Legislative parties respond to the changing preferences of the citizens they represent through the a...
Over the past decade, a number of new measures have been developed that attempt to capture the polit...
In recent years, a number of media commentators and scholars have blamed primary voters for the rise...
Party support has a strong influence on candidate success in the primary. What remains unexplored is...
When voters learn about candidates' issue positions during election campaigns, does it affect how th...
How do marginal voters differ from regular voters? I develop a method for comparing the partisan pre...
We know that elite polarization and mass sorting have led to an explosion of hostility between parti...
Electoral systems determine the role that representatives’ party affiliations play in political repr...
This dataset and the associated code re-creates the tables and figures for the paper "Primaries and ...
The following study is comprised of three essays, each examining a different manner by which race an...
The observed rate of Americans voting for a different party across successive presidential elections...
Would giving party leaders more influence in primary elections in the U.S. decrease elite polarizati...
In an effort to break the link between districts' lack of competitiveness and the election of ideolo...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Legislative parties respond to the changing preferences of the citizens they represent through the a...
Over the past decade, a number of new measures have been developed that attempt to capture the polit...
In recent years, a number of media commentators and scholars have blamed primary voters for the rise...
Party support has a strong influence on candidate success in the primary. What remains unexplored is...
When voters learn about candidates' issue positions during election campaigns, does it affect how th...
How do marginal voters differ from regular voters? I develop a method for comparing the partisan pre...
We know that elite polarization and mass sorting have led to an explosion of hostility between parti...
Electoral systems determine the role that representatives’ party affiliations play in political repr...
This dataset and the associated code re-creates the tables and figures for the paper "Primaries and ...
The following study is comprised of three essays, each examining a different manner by which race an...
The observed rate of Americans voting for a different party across successive presidential elections...
Would giving party leaders more influence in primary elections in the U.S. decrease elite polarizati...
In an effort to break the link between districts' lack of competitiveness and the election of ideolo...