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Party Committee Targeting and the Evolution of Competition in US House Elections
16
Citations
24
References
2015
Year
Overall CompetitivenessPublic PolicySmart VotingUs House ElectionsElection ForecastingElectionsPolitical ProcessPolitical BehaviorParty Committee TargetingPolitical PartiesCongressional CandidatesPolitical CompetitionPolitical ScienceSocial Sciences
This paper examines the effects of the increased role of party organizations in the recruitment and funding of congressional candidates in the US House post-1994. The recent uncertainty over which party will gain majority control of the House has transformed the role of party organizations in House campaigns. Despite the new resources devoted to each competitive seat in the House we find minimal changes in the overall competitiveness of US House elections. Additionally, the vast majority of potentially competitive seats do not draw a high quality challenger. Our results suggest that if parties recruited more quality candidates in the full range of these conceivably winnable seats this effort could produce more competitive seats or more seat turnover in the House.
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