I build a citizen-candidate model in which one candidate, the incumbent, can selectively eliminate other citizen-candidates. I apply it to study candidate elimination in competitive autocracies. I find that the incumbent either eliminates all competitive challengers to win the election, removes a smaller subset of challengers to select a preferable successor, or organizes a free and fair election and loses power. In a free and fair election, the median voter result does not hold. For a large range of parameters, the successor selected by the incumbent can be more moderate than any candidate that would emerge from a free and fair election. Consequently, compared to a free and fair election, the median voter may be better off in a rigged election.
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27 January 2020
Research Article|
January 27 2020
Candidate Elimination in Competitive Autocracies Available to Purchase
Shichao Ma
Shichao Ma
Department of Political Science,
University of Rochester
, Rochester, NY, USA
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The author thanks Mark Fey, Bonnie Meguid, and Randall Stone for their guidance. The author is also grateful to Scott Abramson, Peter Bils, Michael Gibilisco, Gleason Judd, Maggie Penn, Lawrence Rothenberg, Brad Smith, participants of the Graduate Research Seminar at University of Rochester, participants of the 76th annual MPSA Conference, participants of the 2018 APSA Annual Meeting, and two anonymous referees for their helpful comments.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2020 S. Ma
2020
S. Ma
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2020) 15 (1): 105–139.
Citation
Ma S (2020), "Candidate Elimination in Competitive Autocracies". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 15 No. 1 pp. 105–139, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00018098
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