Sidestepping primary reform: political action in response to institutional change

Many believe primary elections distort representation in American legislatures because unrepresentative actors nominate extremist candidates. Advocates have reformed primaries to broaden voter participation and increase representation. Empirical evidence, however, is quite variable on the effects of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Political science research and methods 2022-04, Vol.10 (2), p.391-407
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description Many believe primary elections distort representation in American legislatures because unrepresentative actors nominate extremist candidates. Advocates have reformed primaries to broaden voter participation and increase representation. Empirical evidence, however, is quite variable on the effects of reform. I argue that when institutional reform narrows one pathway of political influence, aggrieved actors take political action elsewhere to circumvent reform. I use a difference-in-differences design in the American states and find that although changing primary rules increases primary turnout, campaign contributions also increase with reform. Implementing nonpartisan primaries and reforming partisan primaries lead to estimated 9 and 21 percent increases in individual campaign contributions per cycle. This suggests actors substitute action across avenues of political influence to limit effects of institutional reform.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act 2002-US
Campaign contributions
Institutional change
Legislatures
Nominations
Original Article
Partisanship
Political action
Political campaigns
Political finance
Political institutions
Political power
Primaries & caucuses
Reforms
Voter turnout
title Sidestepping primary reform: political action in response to institutional change
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