Vice-Presidential Candidates and the Home State Advantage: Playing Second Banana at Home and on the Road

Extending the Lewis-Beck and Rice (1983) analysis of presidential home state advantage to the vice-presidency shows a much smaller advantage to the ticket. On average the vice-presidential candidate gains only about 0.3 percent more in his home state than expected. The major determinant of the degre...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of political science 1989-05, Vol.33 (2), p.537-540
Hauptverfasser: Dudley, Robert L., Rapoport, Ronald B.
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container_title American journal of political science
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creator Dudley, Robert L.
Rapoport, Ronald B.
description Extending the Lewis-Beck and Rice (1983) analysis of presidential home state advantage to the vice-presidency shows a much smaller advantage to the ticket. On average the vice-presidential candidate gains only about 0.3 percent more in his home state than expected. The major determinant of the degree of advantage is, as in the earlier work, size of state
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Candidates
Incumbents
Political candidates
Political parties
Political science
Presidential candidates
Presidential elections
Research Update
Social research
State elections
Vice presidency
Vice presidential candidates
Vice Presidents
Voter behavior
Voting
title Vice-Presidential Candidates and the Home State Advantage: Playing Second Banana at Home and on the Road
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