Models of single district plurality elections show that with three parties anything can happen - extreme policies can win regardless of voter preferences. I show that when single district elections are used to fill a legislature we get back to a world where the median voter matters. An extreme policy will generally only come about if it is preferred to a more moderate policy by the median voter in a majority of districts. The mere existence of a centrist party can lead to moderate outcomes even if the party itself wins few seats. Furthermore, I show that while standard single district elections always have misaligned voting i.e. some voters do not vote for their preferred choice, equilibria of the legislative election exist with no misalign...
Elsewhere (Groseclose and Milyo, 2010), we examine a game where each legislator has preferences over...
We compare single round vs. runoff elections under plurality rule, allowing for partly endogenous pa...
We compare single round vs. runoff elections under plurality rule, allowing for partly endogenous p...
Conventional models of single district plurality elections show that with three parties anything can...
Conventional models of single district plurality elections show that with three par-ties anything ca...
Received 30 June 2015, Revised 15 August 2016, Accepted 17 August 2016, Available online 24 August 2...
We present a model where a society elects a parliament by voting for candidates belonging to two par...
It is commonly thought that in an election with two parties there can be no strategic voting - voter...
This paper considers a model of elections in which parties compete simultaneously for multiple distr...
We present a model where a society elects a parliament by voting for candidates belonging to two pa...
I introduce a model of representative democracy that allows for strategic parties, strategic candida...
We compare single ballot vs dual ballot elections under plurality rule, assuming sincere voting and ...
We examine a legislative voting game where decisions are being made over both ideological and distri...
In this paper we develop a basic model of endogenous choice of electoral rules in a multiparty syste...
Proponents of Approval Voting argue that this electoral rule leads to more centrist outcomes compare...
Elsewhere (Groseclose and Milyo, 2010), we examine a game where each legislator has preferences over...
We compare single round vs. runoff elections under plurality rule, allowing for partly endogenous pa...
We compare single round vs. runoff elections under plurality rule, allowing for partly endogenous p...
Conventional models of single district plurality elections show that with three parties anything can...
Conventional models of single district plurality elections show that with three par-ties anything ca...
Received 30 June 2015, Revised 15 August 2016, Accepted 17 August 2016, Available online 24 August 2...
We present a model where a society elects a parliament by voting for candidates belonging to two par...
It is commonly thought that in an election with two parties there can be no strategic voting - voter...
This paper considers a model of elections in which parties compete simultaneously for multiple distr...
We present a model where a society elects a parliament by voting for candidates belonging to two pa...
I introduce a model of representative democracy that allows for strategic parties, strategic candida...
We compare single ballot vs dual ballot elections under plurality rule, assuming sincere voting and ...
We examine a legislative voting game where decisions are being made over both ideological and distri...
In this paper we develop a basic model of endogenous choice of electoral rules in a multiparty syste...
Proponents of Approval Voting argue that this electoral rule leads to more centrist outcomes compare...
Elsewhere (Groseclose and Milyo, 2010), we examine a game where each legislator has preferences over...
We compare single round vs. runoff elections under plurality rule, allowing for partly endogenous pa...
We compare single round vs. runoff elections under plurality rule, allowing for partly endogenous p...