Bitter primaries hurt high-profile candidates’ chances in the general election, Stanford research shows
Stanford political scientist Andrew Hall found that contentious primaries that receive heavy media coverage and voter attention tend to produce nominees who do less well in the general election.
A divisive political primary that receives heavy media scrutiny reduces the party nominee’s chances in the general election, Stanford research shows.
But, if the primary has not generated much attention, then the primary winner is less affected – and sometimes even helped – in the general election.
“When parties go through divisive primaries in (highly) salient electoral settings, they suffer significant penalties in the general election,” said Andrew B. Hall, an assistant professor of political science at Stanford. He recently published a study on this issue, along with co-author Alexander Fouirnaies from the University of Oxford.
Primaries involving presidential and congressional races typically attract more media coverage and voter attention compared with state legislative campaigns, Hall said. Political conventional wisdom has maintained that while highly competitive primaries may help parties select quality candidates and inform voters about them, the downside is exposing those nominees’ flaws and hurting the chance of victory in the general election.
Hall’s research confirms this generally, but also explains the role of high and low media coverage as well as the degree of voter attention toward the primary campaigns.
Information matters
Hall and Fouirnaies examined data from U.S. states that use runoff primaries for party nominations. Runoffs are second-round elections that are triggered when a candidate does not win a high enough percentage of the initial primary vote, usually 50 percent. A runoff typically indicates a more contentious primary season (two rounds of voting as opposed to one) with heavier media scrutiny.
In U.S. House and Senate races, the researchers found significant negative effects for party candidates who emerged from runoffs to advance to general elections. In fact, going to a runoff decreases the party’s general election vote share by 6 to 9 percentage points, on average, and decreases the probability that the party wins the general election by roughly 21 percentage points, on average, according to the research.
However, in U.S. state legislative races, runoff primaries do not hurt candidates, Hall found. And, in competitive contexts, the runoff process may actually help the candidates in the general election, he said.
The difference, Hall said, is due to the nature of runoff elections in the two contexts. Typically, U.S. House and Senate campaigns receive much more media scrutiny and attention than state legislative races.
“In the U.S. House and U.S. Senate, divisive primaries exert a substantial penalty on parties in the general election. Parties in high salience contexts (those with higher media coverage and voter attention) have a strong incentive to avoid publicly visible conflict among potential nominees,” he wrote.
He said that in high information contexts, making an informed choice may already be easier for voters, so open competition harms the party in the general election.
In lower information contexts, where figuring out which candidate to choose may be much more difficult for voters, parties do better in an open competition that eventually selects the stronger candidate for the general election, Hall said. Such primaries – typically state legislative races – usually receive less media coverage and voter attention is lower than for Senate or House races.
Beyond this, the researchers also found that the negative effects of runoff primaries are larger when candidates are further apart ideologically. They did not find any evidence that the runoff penalty is higher in states where the runoff primary lasts longer.
Election season, possible reforms
In an interview, Hall suggested that while divisive primaries may be bad for parties, they may not be bad for voters and citizens. The research indicates that divisive primaries come with a high level of information and media coverage, which suggests that the voting in such contests is more informed.
Also, commonly suggested reforms – such as eliminating primaries in favor of one general election with many candidates – come with their own problems, he added.
“Primaries are fundamentally different from general elections,” Hall said. “It’s not clear that they can or should be democratic in exactly the same way as a general election. If we let the voters decide who gets into office, in a purely one-person, one-vote way with plurality rules, some chaotic things can result from the large number of options.”
In such a scenario, he said, voters could cast ballots on a very wide field of candidates not vetted by a primary process and as a result, “accidentally” elect someone who would not otherwise win. Primaries alleviate this problem by narrowing the choices to a few candidates, at least for the major parties, he noted.
“In some sense, this (the primary system) is fundamentally ‘undemocratic,’ but it’s highly desirable in practice given our majoritarian system,” he said.
If primaries did not exist, Hall said, it could return American politics to the time of “smoke-filled rooms” and more extreme candidates, as party brokers who run nominating processes are unlikely to be particularly moderate people.
“If we let everyone vote in the primaries without any structure, we might prevent the parties from being able to choose nominees who systematically reflect their platforms,” he said.
Still, key primary rules – such as who’s allowed to vote, party members or non-party members, and how many delegates are selected – are receiving much attention, he said. Hall expects possible changes to these rules at both the federal and state levels. For example, the Democratic Party of Hawaii currently is arguing a case in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit that will decide whether its primary can be closed to non-party voters – it’s currently open.