1991
DOI: 10.2307/439971
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Southern Primary and Electoral Competition and Incumbent Success

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Cited by 23 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…2 Incumbents may win by greater margins without being any more likely to win, period. Garand (1991) and Jewell and Breaux (1988) make this same point empirically in their study of state legislative victory margins and incumbent reelection rates, noting that margins in races involving incumbents grew substantially in the 1970s-1980s, but that incumbent victory rates edged up barely perceptively. This suggests replacing vote-denominated measures of incumbency advantage with an outcomedenominated measure-an estimate of the extent to which incumbency generates a higher probability of electoral victory.…”
Section: Incumbency Advantage In State Legislaturesmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…2 Incumbents may win by greater margins without being any more likely to win, period. Garand (1991) and Jewell and Breaux (1988) make this same point empirically in their study of state legislative victory margins and incumbent reelection rates, noting that margins in races involving incumbents grew substantially in the 1970s-1980s, but that incumbent victory rates edged up barely perceptively. This suggests replacing vote-denominated measures of incumbency advantage with an outcomedenominated measure-an estimate of the extent to which incumbency generates a higher probability of electoral victory.…”
Section: Incumbency Advantage In State Legislaturesmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…In 1987, the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) made available for the first time a machine-readable dataset of legislative election results for all states from 1968 through 1986, prompting a torrent of studies (Jewell andBreaux 1988, 1991;Breaux 1990;Garand 1991;Holbrook and Tidmarch 1991;Weber, Tucker, and Brace 1991) that revisited many of the issues central to the earlier literature on Congress. This work shows that there was substantial growth in the vote-denominated incumbency advantage for state legislators during the 1970s and 1980s (Jewell and Breaux 1988;Garand 1991) and that the resources available to legislators that facilitate constituency service activities account for much of that growth (Holbrook and Tidmarch 1991;Weber, Tucker, and Brace 1991). King (1991) confirms this conclusion in applying the Gelman and King (1990) model to the ICPSR data on elections in 13 states, as do Cox and Morgenstern (1993), with a larger dataset that includes states using both pure single-member district (SMD) and post-position elections.…”
Section: Incumbency Advantage In State Legislaturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Van Dunk and Weber (: Figure ) find over 75% of state house races were contested in 1972 but fell 10% by 1986. During this period, the rates of incumbents seeking reelection did not decline, were highly successful in primaries, and became less likely to be challenged in the general election (Grau ; Jewell and Breaux ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Candidates, as well as interest groups and parties, understand the formidable force of incumbency. Previous research from the state legislative setting clearly indicates that the presence of an incumbent reduces the level of competition in both general (Breaux 1990;Garand 1991;Holbrook and Tidmarch 1991;Jewell and Breaux 1988) and primary elections (Grau 1981;Jewell 1967;Jewell and Breaux 1991;Key 1956). Given the strength of these findings, we can expect competition to be lower when an incumbent runs.…”
Section: Competitive Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%