This paper considers the manner and extent to which citizens' preferences regarding styles of political representation influence electoral choices, at both the nominating and the general election stages. Using unique survey data gathered for the purpose of examining this question, the authors focus on the 2008 presidential election cycle as an analytical case. They find considerable evidence that Democratic voters are more likely than Republicans to prefer a president who follows the wishes of the American public when it comes to making policy. Republicans, by contrast, are more inclined to expect a president to ignore public opinion, listening instead to his or her internal conscience. The authors speculate that this pattern helped John Mc...
This paper analyzes voting behavior in the 2012 U.S. presidential election. Using national survey da...
This article employs data gathered in a 2006 national survey to study how the American electorate ev...
The recent political atmosphere in America has reflected a perceived lack of constituent representat...
This paper considers the manner and extent to which citizens' preferences regarding styles of politi...
This paper considers the manner and extent to which citizens’ preferences regarding styles of politi...
This dissertation presents a communication model of the impact of candidate character traits on vote...
The claim that the 2008 presidential election was a transformative one is fast becoming part of the ...
Vote choice has traditionally been viewed as a function of partisan predispositions, issue positions...
Using unique survey data that allows us to observe both voters’ and politicians’ preferences for loc...
This paper studies the determinants of citizens’ preferences for different electoral systems. We use...
In the first two essays of this dissertation we propose and estimate two policy-preference-based mod...
One theory of populistic democratic politics proposes that citizens vote in elections for c and idat...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
This paper analyzes voting behavior in the 2012 U.S. presidential election. Using national survey da...
This article employs data gathered in a 2006 national survey to study how the American electorate ev...
The recent political atmosphere in America has reflected a perceived lack of constituent representat...
This paper considers the manner and extent to which citizens' preferences regarding styles of politi...
This paper considers the manner and extent to which citizens’ preferences regarding styles of politi...
This dissertation presents a communication model of the impact of candidate character traits on vote...
The claim that the 2008 presidential election was a transformative one is fast becoming part of the ...
Vote choice has traditionally been viewed as a function of partisan predispositions, issue positions...
Using unique survey data that allows us to observe both voters’ and politicians’ preferences for loc...
This paper studies the determinants of citizens’ preferences for different electoral systems. We use...
In the first two essays of this dissertation we propose and estimate two policy-preference-based mod...
One theory of populistic democratic politics proposes that citizens vote in elections for c and idat...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
This paper analyzes voting behavior in the 2012 U.S. presidential election. Using national survey da...
This article employs data gathered in a 2006 national survey to study how the American electorate ev...
The recent political atmosphere in America has reflected a perceived lack of constituent representat...