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House Re-elections and Senate Defeats: The Role of the Challenger

Barbara Hinckley

British Journal of Political Science, 1980, vol. 10, issue 4, 441-460

Abstract: The advantage of incumbency has long intrigued students of congressional elections. Whether measured at individual or aggregate levels, by re-election rates or voting margins, the advantage has been striking: simply knowing that there is an incumbent in the contest supplies a major predictor of the vote. The person in office – the incumbent – is overwhelmingly likely to win re-election and to win by larger margins than victorious non-incumbents.

Date: 1980
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