Campaign Communications in US Congressional Elections
Abstract
Electoral campaigns are the foundation of democratic governance; yet scholarship on the content of campaign communications remains underdeveloped. In this paper, we advance research on U.S. congressional campaigns by integrating and extending extant theories of campaign communication. We test the resulting predictions with a novel dataset based on candidate Web sites over three election cycles. Unlike television advertisements or newspaper coverage, Web sites provide an unmediated, holistic, and representative portrait of campaigns. We find that incumbents and challengers differ across a broad range of behavior that reflects varying attitudes toward risk, that incumbents’ strategies depend on the competitiveness of the race, and that candidates link negative campaigning to other aspects of their rhetorical strategies. Our efforts provide researchers with a basis for moving toward a more complete understanding of congressional campaigns.
Repository Citation
Parkin, Michael, James N. Druckman, and Martin Kifer. 2009. "Campaign Communications in US Congressional Elections." American Political Science Review 103(3): 343-366.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Publication Date
1-1-2009
Publication Title
American Political Science Review
Department
Politics
Document Type
Article
DOI
10.1017/S0003055409990037
Language
English
Format
text