The Role of Party in Nominating Gubernatorial Candidates

Authors

  • Malcolm E. Jewell

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15763/issn.2374-7781.1994.15.0.157-170

Abstract

There are seven states in which preprimary endorsements are provided by law, mostly ones that have used them for twenty years or more. and five other states where the rules of one or both parties provide for endorsements. States with legal endorsements continue to have relatively few contested primaries. But there has been a substantial decline, from over three-fourths to less than half, in the proportion of gubernatorial endorsees who win contested primaries (in states with either legal or informal endorsements). Endorsements are less successful if the convention represents too narrow a political or ideological base and the primary winner can appeal to a broader constituency.

References

Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report. 1984-1992. Washington. DC: Congressional Quarterly. Inc.

Jewell. Malcolm E. 1984. Parties and Primaries: Nominating State Governors. New York: Praeger.

Key. V.O. Jr. 1956. American State Politics: An Introduction. New York: Knopf.

Morehouse. Sarah. 1992. Legislative Party Voting for the Governor's Program. Paper delivered at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association.

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Published

1994-07-01

Issue

Section

Articles