Inter-Party Competition and Primary Contesting: The Case of Indiana
- 1 December 1958
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 52 (4), 1066-1077
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1951986
Abstract
The significance of inter-party competition for variations in electoral behavior has recently been recognized in a number of political studies. The objects of this article are, first, to refine the concepts of safe and competitive electoral districts, and second, to replicate some propositions relating inter-party competition to the number of contestants in primary elections in Indiana.Most preceding studies of inter-party competition have examined behavior in large electoral jurisdictions, rarely one smaller than a congressional district and often an entire state. Generally they have examined behavior relating to a single office, usually the governor's or a congressman's, and have assigned every electoral-situation to either a “safe” or an “unsafe” category. They have varied in the tests applied to differentiate the latter. Most tests have determined safeness on the basis of one election; they have differed in the selection of that election and in the size of the majority thought to indicate safety.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Primary Elections as the Alternative to Party Competition in "Safe" DistrictsThe Journal of Politics, 1953