4.3 Article

Polarization and Campaign Spending in Elections

Journal

JOURNAL OF POLITICS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/722045

Keywords

elections; valence; polarization; campaign spending; extremism

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This study develops a Downsian model of electoral competition and reveals the phenomena of platform divergence and inefficiency in campaign spending during the process of candidates using platforms and campaign spending to gain voter support.
I develop a Downsian model of electoral competition in which candidates with policy and office motivations use platforms and campaign spending to gain the median voter's support. The unique equilibrium involves randomizing over platforms and spending and exhibits the following properties: (i) ex ante uncertainty about the winner, (ii) platform divergence, (iii) inefficiency in spending and outcomes, (iv) polarization, and (v) voter extremism. I show that platform polarization and spending move in tandem, since spending is used by candidates to gain support for extreme platforms. Factors that contribute to both include the candidates' desire for extreme policies and their capability at translating spending into support for them. I also show that strong incumbents parlay an advantage into more extreme platforms, consistent with the classic marginality hypothesis but contrasting with a large theoretical literature in which candidates with an (exogenous or endogenous) valence advantage tend to moderate their platforms.

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