Posted by David Schleicher, guest-blogging:
Why Is There No Partisan Competition in City Council Elections? Implications 2 
-- The Problems of Primary and Non-Partisan Elections:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_12_07-2008_12_13.shtml#1229023989


   [1]If my model laid out in my paper is correct, it has dramatic
   implications for non-partisan elections and party primaries.

   1. Non-Partisan Elections Make Things Worse, Not Better 

   One major piece of the Progressive movement�s response to big-city
   political machines was to institute non-partisan local elections. In a
   non-partisan election, no party preferences are listed on the ballot;
   candidate names appear by themselves. This is how local elections are
   conducted in most American localities.

   If my story is right, these elections are even worse than partisan
   local elections. The nub of the story I laid out yesterday was that
   party heuristics -- the fact of party endorsement -- gave voters in
   local elections too little information to make an even-mildly informed
   decision about for whom they should vote. Given the low-information
   nature of individual city council races, party heuristics make up the
   lion�s share, if not the entirety, of the information that voters
   receive in local elections. If the party heuristics don�t give a great
   deal of information about what a candidate is likely to do, then
   voting won�t produce a government that represents the preferences of
   locals on local issues.

   Non-partisan elections take the little information contained in the
   party heuristic at the local level and throw it out the window. If
   voters in partisan elections are effectively poorly informed about the
   policy stances of candidates, voters in non-partisan elections are
   completely lost.

   When compared with partisan elections, non-partisan elections generate
   lower voter turnout, strengthen the incumbency effect and make
   variables like candidate ethnic, gender and other candidate status
   variables (such as whether a candidate�s name is preceded by an
   honorific) matter much more. Voters in non-partisan elections are not
   provided with any easy way to determine the stances of candidates on
   local policies and, as a result, use variables that don�t track at all
   to policy stances or rely on the name they�ve heard. As I summarize
   the research on the field [2]in the paper, �voters in nonpartisan
   system do not replace the heuristic provided by party label with
   other, better indicators of policy stances taken by candidates - they
   do not learn their policy position or rely on newspaper or civic group
   endorsements. Instead, for the most part, voters simply remain
   entirely uninformed.�

   Non-partisan elections make things worse, not better.

   2. Majority party primaries do not replace the need for general
   election competition

   As some of the comments have noted, most of the action in big city
   elections takes place in party primaries. This is true, but it takes
   little of the normative sting out of the problems caused by a lack of
   general election competition.

   The problem with majority party primaries is the same as the problem
   with non-partisan elections -- voters are not given any information on
   the ballot. There are no parties internal to the Democratic or
   Republican Parties. Even where there are formal internal-to-a-party
   coalitions, there is no way to provide information on the ballot and
   hence voters cannot use them to engage in meaningful retrospective
   evaluation or to collect views of groups over time. Voters in party
   primaries are, hence as adrift about ideological stances of candidates
   as voters are in non-partisan elections. They have little information
   about the candidates and the ballot does not provide them any
   information to mitigate this ignorance.

   As such, majority party primaries do not generate much ideological
   competition. Not surprisingly, city council primaries usually turn on
   incumbency, ethnicity and other candidate status variables, party
   organization support and money, with issue stances playing a very
   small role. Voters don't have the ability to vote on the issues
   because they have too little information, and as a result turn to less
   useful heuristics.

   All of that said, it is better to have primary elections than not to
   have them (they provide some check on truly unpopular politicians).
   But they do not replicate, or even go much of the way towards
   replicating, the beneficial effects of general election competition.
   The conclusion I drew in the last post, that big city elections are
   unlikely to produce representative outcomes, is not changed by the
   fact of primary elections.

References

   1. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1122422
   2. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1122422

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