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Electoral Balancing in Federal and Sub-national Elections: The Case of Canada
Authors:Robert S. Erikson and Mikhail G. Filippov
Affiliation:(1) Department of Political Science, Columbia University, 706 International Affairs Building, 420 West 118th Street, New York, New York, 10027;(2) Department of Political Science, Washington University, Campus Box 1063, 219 Eliot Hall, One Brookings Drive, St. Louis, MO p, 63130-4899
Abstract:The major premise of this study is that in federal countries voters can balance and moderate national policy by dividing electoral support between different parties in federal and sub-national elections. We compare the non-concurrent federal and provincial elections in Canada to assess the balancing properties of sub-national elections. The balancing hypothesis implies that the federal incumbent party may suffer additional electoral losses in provincial elections. We use several statistical tests - ordinary OLS, ldquofixed effectrdquo and ldquounbalanced random effectrdquo cross-section time series - to analyze Canadian electoral data for the period of 1949-1997. All tests sustain that the incumbent party at the federal level loses votes in provincial elections.
Keywords:electoral balancing  federalism  Canadian elections
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