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Expressive Politics: Issue Strategies of Congressional Challengers

Book
2004
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summary
The advantage incumbent members of Congress hold over their opponents in campaigns for office has steadily grown over the past five decades. While students of congressional politics have analyzed the effect of this advantage on members' behavior in office, little is known of its effect on their opponents. Sitting members of the House frequently face underfinanced and obscure challengers. Conventional theories of electoral competition assume that the only hope these candidates have of even coming close to making such an election competitive is to align their policy positions as closely as possible to those of the median voter. Yet challengers to incumbents often run on quite extreme position platforms. In the majority of these uncompetitive races, Robert G. Boatright explains, a new type of politics is emerging-a politics of expressive campaigning, where challengers seek to use their campaigns as a platform for their own views and as a means for helping their party achieve goals other than winning the election at hand. This research makes two types of contributions to existing political science literature. On a theoretical level, it argues for a reconceptualization of the motives of candidates and parties in rational choice analysis. On a practical level, it seeks to enrich our understanding of the role that challengers play in American elections and of the reason why different types of challengers emerge in different types of elections. Boatright argues that the role of challengers in the American electoral process can be understood only if we broaden our theories about rational candidate behavior.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright Page

Table of Contents

pp. v-vi

List of Tables and Figures

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-x

Introduction

pp. xi-xxiv

Chapter 1. Parallel Histories: The Incumbency Advantage and Electoral Competition

pp. 1-16

Chapter 2. The Rational Candidate and the Hopeless Cause

pp. 17-47

Chapter 3. Incumbents and Challengers Compared

pp. 48-73

Chapter 4. "It's Not Like Rocket Science": How Candidates Understand Public Opinion

pp. 74-101

Chapter 5. "Like Throwing Golf Balls against the Wall": The Candidates Talk about Campaign Issues and Ideology

pp. 102-141

Chapter 6. "You Don't Know Me, But Here I Am": Candidate Perceptions of Party Strength

pp. 142-182

Chapter 7. Expressive Campaigning in 2000 and Beyond

pp. 183-210

Chapter 8. Conclusions: Expressive Politics and Invisible Politics

pp. 211-226

Notes

pp. 227-230

Interviews

pp. 231-234

Works Cited

pp. 235-244

Index

pp. 245-254
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