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Divisive Primaries Do Hurt: U.S. Senate Races, 1956—1972

Robert A. Bernstein

American Political Science Review, 1977, vol. 71, issue 2, 540-545

Abstract: This analysis shows, in contrast to previously published work, that a divisive primary hurts a senatorial candidate's chances for success in the general election. The relationship between divisiveness and lack of success continues to hold when incumbency and state party orientations are controlled. This relationship has an important implication regarding representation. The fact that divisive primaries do hurt strengthens the representation of weak and minor state parties in the U.S. Senate.

Date: 1977
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