Voters' Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions in State Supreme Court Elections

In Voters’ Verdicts, Chris Bonneau and Damon Cann address contemporary concerns with judicial elections by investigating factors that influence voters’ decisions in the election of state supreme court judges. Bonneau and Cann demonstrate that the move to nonpartisan elections, while it depresses political participation, does little to mute the effects of partisanship and ideology. The authors note the irony that judicial elections, often faulted for politicizing the legal process, historically represented an attempt to correct the lack of accountability in the selection of judges by appointment, since unlike appointive systems, judicial elections are at least transparent.

This comprehensive study rests on a broad evidentiary base that spans numerous states and a variety of electoral systems. Bonneau and Cann use the first national survey of voters in state supreme court elections paired with novel laboratory experiments to evaluate the influence of incumbency and other ballot cues on voters’ decisions. Data-rich and analytically rigorous, this provocative volume shows why voters decide to participate in judicial elections and what factors they consider in casting their votes.

A volume in the series Constitutionalism and Democracy

1120558992
Voters' Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions in State Supreme Court Elections

In Voters’ Verdicts, Chris Bonneau and Damon Cann address contemporary concerns with judicial elections by investigating factors that influence voters’ decisions in the election of state supreme court judges. Bonneau and Cann demonstrate that the move to nonpartisan elections, while it depresses political participation, does little to mute the effects of partisanship and ideology. The authors note the irony that judicial elections, often faulted for politicizing the legal process, historically represented an attempt to correct the lack of accountability in the selection of judges by appointment, since unlike appointive systems, judicial elections are at least transparent.

This comprehensive study rests on a broad evidentiary base that spans numerous states and a variety of electoral systems. Bonneau and Cann use the first national survey of voters in state supreme court elections paired with novel laboratory experiments to evaluate the influence of incumbency and other ballot cues on voters’ decisions. Data-rich and analytically rigorous, this provocative volume shows why voters decide to participate in judicial elections and what factors they consider in casting their votes.

A volume in the series Constitutionalism and Democracy

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Voters' Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions in State Supreme Court Elections

Voters' Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions in State Supreme Court Elections

Voters' Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions in State Supreme Court Elections

Voters' Verdicts: Citizens, Campaigns, and Institutions in State Supreme Court Elections

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Overview

In Voters’ Verdicts, Chris Bonneau and Damon Cann address contemporary concerns with judicial elections by investigating factors that influence voters’ decisions in the election of state supreme court judges. Bonneau and Cann demonstrate that the move to nonpartisan elections, while it depresses political participation, does little to mute the effects of partisanship and ideology. The authors note the irony that judicial elections, often faulted for politicizing the legal process, historically represented an attempt to correct the lack of accountability in the selection of judges by appointment, since unlike appointive systems, judicial elections are at least transparent.

This comprehensive study rests on a broad evidentiary base that spans numerous states and a variety of electoral systems. Bonneau and Cann use the first national survey of voters in state supreme court elections paired with novel laboratory experiments to evaluate the influence of incumbency and other ballot cues on voters’ decisions. Data-rich and analytically rigorous, this provocative volume shows why voters decide to participate in judicial elections and what factors they consider in casting their votes.

A volume in the series Constitutionalism and Democracy


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813937601
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 07/07/2015
Series: Constitutionalism and Democracy
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 176
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Chris W. Bonneau, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh, is coauthor with Melinda Gann Hall of In Defense of Judicial Elections. Damon M. Cann, Associate Professor of Political Science at Utah State University, is author of Sharing the Wealth: Member Contributions and the Exchange Theory of Party Influence in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction: The Landscape of Judicial Elections 1

1 Individual-Level Factors and Voter Participation in State Supreme Court Elections 17

2 Vote Choice in State Supreme Court Elections 35

3 Voting Decisions in Partisan and Nonpartisan Elections 57

4 Does One Good Term Deserve Another? Incumbency and Vote Choice 69

5 Voting Yes: Retention Elections 85

6 Conclusion 101

Appendixes

A About the CCES 121

B List of Races Included in Study 123

C Experiments 131

Notes 139

References 147

Index 159

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