Partisan Effects of Voter Turnout in Senatorial and Gubernatorial Elections
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 90 (4) , 780-793
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2945842
Abstract
Conventional wisdom holds that higher turnout favors Democrats. Previous studies of this hypothesis rely on presidential and House elections or on survey data, but senatorial and gubernatorial elections offer better conditions for directly testing turnout effects in U.S. politics. In a comprehensive analysis of these statewide elections since 1928, we find that the conventional theory was true outside the South through 1964, but since 1965 the overall relationship between turnout and partisan outcomes has been insignificant. Even before the mid-1960s, the turnout effect outside the South was strongest in Republican states and insignificant or negative in heavily Democratic states. A similar but weaker pattern obtains after 1964. In the South, which we analyze only since 1966, higher turnout helped Republicans until 1990, but in 1990–94 the effect became pro-Democratic. The conventional theory cannot account for these complex patterns, but they are impressively consistent with DeNardo's (1980) theory.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Registration Reform and Turnout Change in the American StatesAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1995
- Turnout and the Vote RevisitedAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1995
- State Turnout and Presidential VotingAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1995
- Turnout and the Vote for Left-of-Centre Parties: A Cross-National AnalysisBritish Journal of Political Science, 1995
- Turnout and the Democratic VoteAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1994
- Pooled Time Series AnalysisJournal of Marketing Research, 1990
- Voter Turnout in New Zealand General Elections, 1928-1988Political Science, 1988
- Declining Turnout in an Era of Waning PartisanshipBritish Journal of Political Science, 1987
- Does Heavy Turnout Help Democrats in Presidential Elections?American Political Science Review, 1986
- Regression in Space and Time: A Statistical EssayAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1985