This article examines the advantages a single Democratic incumbent utilized to win reelection in 1984 despite an overwhelming victory by Ronald Reagan at the top of the ticket in the congressional district. The incumbent won reelection because of two types of ticket splitting: Republican-inclined voters who voted for Republican candidates for president and U.S. Senate and split to vote for the Democratic incumbent for Congress, and Democratic voters who supported Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate and Congress but split to vote for Ronald Reagan for president. Ticket splitting was found to be associated with basic political orientation—weak Republican and independent voters split in favor of the Democratic incumbent and were far less lik...
In many ways the election of 1972 was one of the most unusual in American history. Precisely one dec...
ACCORDING to many political analysts, the effect of partisanship on vote choice has declined since t...
This research is based on a sample of 807 registered Democrats who voted in the 2004 presidential pr...
This study examines the roots of presidential vote defection by Democratic party identifiers in the ...
This article analyzes the votes of party leaders and elected officials, or superdekgates, at the 198...
Originally published in Public Opinion Quarterly, v. 55, no. 2 (1991), p. 218-231."Scholars have dev...
This article builds on previous research with an analysis of partisan differ-ences in the emergence ...
Although the presidential coattail effect has been an object of frequent study, the question of whet...
Although the presidential coattail effect has been an object of frequent study, the question of whet...
Includes bibliographical references.This thesis is primarily concerned with the impact of presidenti...
Democrats and Republicans have been occupying the major part of the presidential elections in Americ...
In the period since the Reagan revolution that disrupted decades of Democratic control of the United...
Very little research has investigated how a two-stage electoral process (a primary election to nomin...
The fact that political parties hold competitive nomination contests that require voters to choose a...
This article explores the initial desertion and continued realignment of about one-sixth of the whit...
In many ways the election of 1972 was one of the most unusual in American history. Precisely one dec...
ACCORDING to many political analysts, the effect of partisanship on vote choice has declined since t...
This research is based on a sample of 807 registered Democrats who voted in the 2004 presidential pr...
This study examines the roots of presidential vote defection by Democratic party identifiers in the ...
This article analyzes the votes of party leaders and elected officials, or superdekgates, at the 198...
Originally published in Public Opinion Quarterly, v. 55, no. 2 (1991), p. 218-231."Scholars have dev...
This article builds on previous research with an analysis of partisan differ-ences in the emergence ...
Although the presidential coattail effect has been an object of frequent study, the question of whet...
Although the presidential coattail effect has been an object of frequent study, the question of whet...
Includes bibliographical references.This thesis is primarily concerned with the impact of presidenti...
Democrats and Republicans have been occupying the major part of the presidential elections in Americ...
In the period since the Reagan revolution that disrupted decades of Democratic control of the United...
Very little research has investigated how a two-stage electoral process (a primary election to nomin...
The fact that political parties hold competitive nomination contests that require voters to choose a...
This article explores the initial desertion and continued realignment of about one-sixth of the whit...
In many ways the election of 1972 was one of the most unusual in American history. Precisely one dec...
ACCORDING to many political analysts, the effect of partisanship on vote choice has declined since t...
This research is based on a sample of 807 registered Democrats who voted in the 2004 presidential pr...