Public Attention and Head-to-Head Campaign Fundraising: An Examination of U.S. Senate Elections

Authors

  • William Curtis Ellis Oral Roberts University
  • Joseph T. Ripberger University of Oklahoma
  • Colin Swearingen John Carroll University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15763/issn.2374-779X.2017.36.1.30-53

Abstract

Does public attention to political candidates impact fundraising margins in U.S. Senate elections? Applying a novel conceptualization of public attention, we examine U.S. Senate elections from 2004 through 2014 and find that increases in relative public attention relate to increases in head-to-head fundraising margins in open seat races. We conclude by asking whether or not all attention to candidates is "good" attention. Evidence from the 2006 Allen/Webb election suggests that all attention is not "good" attention. This race demonstrates that candidates can supply attention-grabbing action that increases relative public attention while stimulating exceptional losses in relative fundraising margins. Further research must clearly theorize conditions under which supplying public attention-grabbing behavior may damage political campaigns

Author Biographies

William Curtis Ellis, Oral Roberts University

Chair and Associate Professor of History, Humanities and Government 

Joseph T. Ripberger, University of Oklahoma

Deputy Director for Research at the Center for Risk and Crisis Management at the University of Oklahoma and a Research Scientist at the Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies (CIMMS)

Colin Swearingen, John Carroll University

Assistant Professor

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Published

2017-05-31

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