Election Calendars and Voter Turnout
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in American Politics Quarterly
- Vol. 14 (1-2) , 89-104
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1532673x8601400106
Abstract
This research examines the effects of election calendars and ballot forms on voter turnout. The ballot attractiveness hypothesis predicts that concurrent senatorial and gubernatorial races on a presidential-year ballot increase the likelihood that citizens will vote. The evidence in 1980 is that this hypothesis is true with respect to gubernatorial elections. The election frequency hypothesis predicts that the more frequently elections are scheduled, the less likely it is that citizens will vote in any of them. Presidential and state primaries are a major source of frequent elections. In 1980, presidential primaries, in particular those instituted since 1968, did depress turnout. Runoff primaries depressed turnout as well. State primaries held separately from presidential primaries did not depress turnout by an additional significant amount. These findings are based on validated turnout in the 1980 CPS Election Study.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Mobilization of Voters in Congressional ElectionsThe Journal of Politics, 1985
- CHANGE IN ELECTION CALENDARS AND TURNOUT DECLINEAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1982
- Explanations of Turnout DeclineAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1981
- Decline of U.S. Voter TurnoutAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1981
- A Multivariate Explanation of Decreasing Turnout in Presidential Elections, 1960-1976American Journal of Political Science, 1981
- Divisive Presidential Primaries and Party Electoral Prospects, 1932-1976American Politics Quarterly, 1980
- Why Is Turnout Down?Public Opinion Quarterly, 1979
- From Life Space to Polling Place: The Relevance of Personal Concerns for Voting BehaviorBritish Journal of Political Science, 1977
- Change in Voting Turnout, 1952-1972Public Opinion Quarterly, 1975
- The Divisive Primary Revisited: Party Activists in IowaAmerican Political Science Review, 1974