Over the years, observers of American politics have noted the deleterious effects of party polarization in both the national and state legislatures. Reformers have tried to address this problem by changing primary election laws. A theory underlies these legal changes: the reformers tend to believe that 'more open' primary laws will produce more centrist, moderate, or pragmatic candidates. The 'top-two' primary, just implemented in California, represents the future of these antiparty efforts. Nonpartisan Primary Election Reform examines California's first use of the top-two primary system in 2012. R. Michael Alvarez and J. Andrew Sinclair evaluate the primary from a variety of perspectives and using several different methodologies. Although the first use of this primary system in California did not immediately reshape the state's politics, it also did not have many of the deleterious consequences that some observers had feared. This study provides the foundation for future studies of state primary systems.



Zusammenfassung
Examines California''s first use of the ''top-two'' primary system in 2012 from a variety of perspectives, using several different methodologies.
Titel
Nonpartisan Primary Election Reform
Untertitel
Mitigating Mischief
EAN
9781316288757
ISBN
978-1-316-28875-7
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
16.04.2015
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
3.3 MB
Jahr
2015
Untertitel
Englisch