THE 1976 ELECTION AND THE AMERICAN POLITICAL SYSTEM |
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Authors: | PHILIP WILLIAMS,GRAHAM K. WILSON&dagger |
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Affiliation: | Nuffield College, Oxford;University of Essex |
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Abstract: | Abstract The elections, remembered as the first in which an incumbent President was defeated since 1932, show other characteristics inconsistent with usual interpretations. The Democratic Party's selection procedure managed to produce a moderate around whom the party could unite for the first time since 1964 while the Republicans experienced a damaging fight which the more extreme candidate almost won. Analysis of the results refutes many common conclusions. The popular vote was not as close as in other postwar elections; regional variations less pronounced and party more important in the campaign than had been supposed. The Republicans showed surprisingly strongly in the Presidential election, but did disastrously again in others. No satisfactory theory explains the discrepancy. Republicans still challenge strongly for the Presidency but consistently fail elsewhere. |
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