2013
DOI: 10.1111/psq.12068
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Presidential Versus Vice Presidential Home State Advantage: A Comparative Analysis of Electoral Significance, Causes, and Processes, 1884‐2008

Abstract: This article compares the electoral significance, causes, and processes associated with presidential versus vice presidential home state advantages. Our analysis of presidential election returns from 1884 through 2008 demonstrates that presidential candidates generally receive a large, statistically significant home state advantage. However, vice presidential home state advantages are statistically negligible and conditioned on the interactive effect of political experience and state population. Furthermore, t… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…If all heterogeneity between treated states and the U.S. aggregate were time-invariant, the two trends would be parallel; instead, the trend in treated states is downward relative to the U.S. control group. (Devine & Kopko, 2013). Substantively, a 2.67 percentage point increase in a ticket's share of the two-party vote-ceteris paribus-would be enough to swing nearly 20% of state-years in our data from one party to another.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…If all heterogeneity between treated states and the U.S. aggregate were time-invariant, the two trends would be parallel; instead, the trend in treated states is downward relative to the U.S. control group. (Devine & Kopko, 2013). Substantively, a 2.67 percentage point increase in a ticket's share of the two-party vote-ceteris paribus-would be enough to swing nearly 20% of state-years in our data from one party to another.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Heersink and Peterson () find systematic evidence of a statistically significant VP HSA, using the synthetic control method. Moreover, they reject contradictory results from previous studies—particularly, Devine and Kopko (; )—as attributable to biased estimates derived from the Lewis‐Beck and Rice () equation. Devine and Kopko (), on the other hand, find no systematic evidence of a statistically significant VP HSA when using a multimethod approach that includes the Lewis‐Beck and Rice equation as well as fixed effects regression models of state election results and logistic regression models of survey data from the 1952–2008 American National Election Studies (ANES).…”
mentioning
confidence: 42%
“…Most analyses of the vice presidential, as well as presidential, home state advantage have derived their estimates from some version of the L‐BRE (Devine and Kopko ; ; Disarro, Barber, and Rice ; Dudley and Rapoport ; also see Schultz ). The most prominent recent examples come from Devine and Kopko's research.…”
Section: Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
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