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      Does Heavy Turnout Help Democrats in Presidential Elections?

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          Abstract

          There is conventional political wisdom that high voter turnout in a U.S. presidential election advantages the majority party. Because the Democratic party has been the dominant party in recent decades, this turnout advantage is often believed to accrue to Democratic presidential candidates. In an article in the June 1980 issue of the Review, James DeNardo challenged this conventional view. Indeed, he claimed that the majority party was likely to suffer with increased turnout when the behavior of core and peripheral voters is taken into account. Harvey J. Tucker and Arnold Vedlitz take issue with DeNardo's reasoning and evidence, and DeNardo embellishes and underscores his original case .

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          Most cited references1

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          The Motivational Basis of Straight and Split Ticket Voting.

          The extraordinary discrepancy in the popular vote for President Eisenhower and the vote for Republican Congressmen in the 1956 election dramatized a privilege which the American electorate exercises almost uniquely in the democratic world, the right of voters to split their ballots between the candidates of opposing political parties.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            applab
            American Political Science Review
            Am Polit Sci Rev
            Cambridge University Press (CUP)
            0003-0554
            1537-5943
            December 1986
            August 1 2014
            : 80
            : 04
            : 1291-1304
            Article
            10.1017/S0003055400185119
            3ac2de0c-75e0-4985-bc94-159249e5e569
            © 2014
            History

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