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Speaker Series -- Michael Ting, Distributive Politics with Primaries

by Kristin Chernoff last modified 2008-05-06 08:46
What
When 05-14-2008
from 12:00 to 13:30
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The Public Lectures Committee for the UCLA Department of Political Science
Invites you to the 2007-08 Speaker Series

Presenting

 

Michael Ting
Associate Professor of Political Science
Columbia University

 

Distributive Politics with Primaries

We develop a model of electoral competition in which two parties compete for votes amongst three groups of voters. Each party first internally selects one of two candidates to run in a general election. Candidates within a party share a fixed ideological platform and can promise a distribution of a unit of public spending across groups. Without primary elections, the selection process is random. With primary elections, an ideologically friendly subset of the voters strategically chooses the candidate. In the basic model, primary elections cause politicians to cater to extreme groups rather than a moderate group with many "swing voters". The amount promised to extreme groups is decreasing in the ideological polarization of those groups, while each party's probability of victory is increasing in the size and extremity of its favored group. We also find that an incumbency advantage reduces the amount promised to extremists, and therefore benefit moderates.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008
12:00noon - 1:30pm
4357 Bunche Hall

 

A light lunch will be served

 

This talk paper can be found at:
http://www.columbia.edu/~mmt2033/primaries_distribution.pdf

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4289 Bunche Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1472 Phone 310.825.4331 Fax 310.825.0778