Logo image
Preemptive Fund-Raising and Challenger Profile in Senate Elections
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Preemptive Fund-Raising and Challenger Profile in Senate Elections

Peverill Squire
The Journal of Politics, Vol.53(4), pp.1150-1164
11/1991
DOI: 10.2307/2131872
pdf
Preemptive Fund-Raising and Challenger Profile in Senate Election1.02 MBDownloadView
Published (Version of record) Open Access
url
https://doi.org/10.2307/2131872View
Published (Version of record)The Journal of Politics, 53:4 (1991) pp. 1150-1164.

Abstract

Since 1980 the amount of money raised by incumbent senators during the first four years of their terms has increased dramatically. A widely held belief is that having a large campaign account well before the election scares the strongest potential challengers from making the race. Findings presented here show that almost every senator now engages in extensive early money raising, but that those senators who have the biggest number of potentially strong opponents back home are the most active in this regard. Large sums of early money do not, however, produce weaker challengers. Instead, the strength of the challenger is usually dictated by the size of the pool of strong candidates; where the number is large, one of the better candidates will make the race. Early money raising does not threaten the competitiveness of Senate elections.

Political Science

Details

Metrics

819 File views/ downloads
28 Record Views
Logo image