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Strategic Considerations or “Cognitive Madisonianism”: The Sources of Split-ticket Voting in the 2006 Mexican Presidential Elections.

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Abstract:

This paper is about the individual-level sources of split-ticket voting. Two possible sources of this kind of political behavior are addressed. On the one hand, voters might split their tickets based on strategic considerations concerning either the presidential or the congressional race. On the other hand, the electorate might vote for different parties in the two races with the purpose of balancing ideologically the public policies enacted by the government, a behavior termed as “cognitive Madisonianism by some authors. These possibilities are addressed using survey data for the 2006 Mexican Presidential Elections.
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Name: Southern Political Science Association
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http://www.spsa.net


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MLA Citation:

Rodriguez-Zepeda, Juan. "Strategic Considerations or “Cognitive Madisonianism”: The Sources of Split-ticket Voting in the 2006 Mexican Presidential Elections." Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Hotel InterContinental, New Orleans, LA, Jan 03, 2007 <Not Available>. 2008-10-09 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p143279_index.html>

APA Citation:

Rodriguez-Zepeda, J. A. , 2007-01-03 "Strategic Considerations or “Cognitive Madisonianism”: The Sources of Split-ticket Voting in the 2006 Mexican Presidential Elections." Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Hotel InterContinental, New Orleans, LA <Not Available>. 2008-10-09 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p143279_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: This paper is about the individual-level sources of split-ticket voting. Two possible sources of this kind of political behavior are addressed. On the one hand, voters might split their tickets based on strategic considerations concerning either the presidential or the congressional race. On the other hand, the electorate might vote for different parties in the two races with the purpose of balancing ideologically the public policies enacted by the government, a behavior termed as “cognitive Madisonianism by some authors. These possibilities are addressed using survey data for the 2006 Mexican Presidential Elections.

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Associated Document Available Southern Political Science Association
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Associated Document Available Political Research Online


Similar Titles:
Electoral Politics and Vote Cleavages in a New Democracy: Split Ticket Voting in Nicaragua's 2006 Presidential Election

Split-Ticket Voting: The Uncertainty Hypothesis. Evidence from the 2006 Mexican Election


 
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