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Published January 1998 | public
Journal Article

Political parties and electoral landscapes

Abstract

We study the relationship between voters' preferences and the emergence of party platforms in two-party democratic elections with adaptive parties. In the model, preferences of voters and the opposition party's platform determine an electoral landscape on which the challenging party must adaptively search for votes. We show that changes in the underlying distribution of voters' preferences result in different electoral landscapes which can be characterized by a measure of ruggedness. We find that locally adapting parties converge to moderate platforms regardless of the landscape's ruggedness. Greater ruggedness, however, tempers a party's ability to find such platforms. Thus, we are able to establish a link between the distribution of voters' preferences and the responsiveness of adaptive parties.

Additional Information

© 1998 Cambridge University Press. The authors wish to thank Roger B. Myerson, David Austen-Smith, Tim Feddersen, Jeffrey Banks and Stan Reiter for helpful comments. This research was supported by grants from Sun Microsystems, the Center for Mathematical Studies in Economics and Management Science and the National Science Foundation (SBR-9409602, SBR-9410948, and SBR-9411025). Computer programs are available from the authors upon request. Formerly SSWP 871.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023