Nomination Processes and Policy Outcomes
We provide a set of new models of three different processes by which political parties nominate candidates for a general election: nominations by party leaders, nominations by a vote of party members, and nominations by a spending competition among potential candidates. We show that more extreme outcomes can emerge from spending competition than from nominations by votes or by party leaders, and that non-median outcomes can result via any of these processes. When voters (and potential nominees) are free to switch political parties, then median outcomes ensue when nominations are decided by a vote but not when nominations are decided by spending competition.
Year of publication: |
2007
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Authors: | Jackson, Matthew O. ; Mathevet, Laurent ; Mattes, Kyle |
Published in: |
Quarterly Journal of Political Science. - now publishers. - Vol. 2.2007, 1, p. 67-92
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Publisher: |
now publishers |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
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