This Website uses cookies. By using this website you are agreeing to our use of cookies and to the terms and conditions listed in our data protection policy. Read more

American Journal of Political Science

Gubernatorial Midterm Slumps

Journal Article
Reference
Folke, Olle and James M. Snyder (2012). “Gubernatorial Midterm Slumps”. American Journal of Political Science 56(4), 931–948. doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-5907.2012.00599.x

Authors
Olle Folke, James M. Snyder

This article studies gubernatorial midterm slumps in U.S. state legislative elections. We employ a regression discontinuity design, which allows us to rule out the hypothesis that the midterm slump simply reflects a type of “reversion to the mean” generated by simple partisan swings or the withdrawal of gubernatorial coattails or “anticipatory balancing.” Our results show that the party of the governor experiences an average seat-share loss of about 3.5 percentage points. We also find evidence suggesting that a large share of the variation in gubernatorial midterm slumps can be accounted for by (1) crude partisan balancing and (2) referendums on state economic performance, with approximately equal weight given to each.