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Title

The Effects of Incumbency In U. S. Congressional Elections, 1950-1988.

Authors

Krashinsky, Michael; Milne, William J.

Abstract

Using a random coefficients model and regression analysis, the authors examine the effects of incumbency in U.S. House and Senate elections since 1950. The model is based on assumptions about the behavior of voters. A strong effect for incumbency is demonstrated, amounting to at least 10 percentage points in the popular vote in elections since 1974. Part of the effect occurs because incumbents by definition do not run against incumbents. A significant time trend emerges, and there is a significant difference in the effect between presidential and nonpresidential years. The effect is robust, being relatively insensitive to changes in the specification of the underlying model. The model is also used to examine changes over time in the attachment of voters to political parties.

Subjects

UNITED States; INCUMBENCY (Public officers); UNITED States Congressional elections; UNITED States elections; UNITED States. Congress. Senate; UNITED States. Congress. House; PRACTICAL politics; AMERICAN politicians; POLITICAL participation

Publication

Legislative Studies Quarterly, 1993, Vol 18, Issue 3, p321

ISSN

0362-9805

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.2307/439829

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