A Unified Theory of Voting
Directional and Proximity Spatial Models| By: | Samuel Merrill, III; Bernard Grofman |
| Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
| Print ISBN: | 9780521662222 |
| eText ISBN: | 9780511033698 |
| Edition: | 1 |
| Format: | Page Fidelity |
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This book addresses the questions: how do voters use their own issue positions and those of candidates to decide how to vote? Does a voter tend to choose the candidate who most closely shares the views of the voter or rather a candidate who holds more extreme views due to the fact that the voters discount the candidates' abilities to implement policy. The authors develop a unified model that incorporates these and other voter motivations and assess its empirical predictions - for both voter choice and candidate strategy - in the US, Norway, and France. The analyses show that a combination of proximity, direction, discounting, and party ID are compatible with the mildly but not extremely divergent policies that are characteristic of many two-party and multiparty electorates. All of these motivations are necessary to understand the linkage between candidate issue positions and voter preferences.