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ID134796
Title ProperTea party movement and the 2012 house election
LanguageENG
AuthorMcNitt, Andrew D
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines Tea Party candidates for the US House of Representative in 2012. Tea Party and Tea Party–endorsed candidates are similar to other Republican candidates. Although they have served in the House for a shorter period, they have approximately the same financial resources, prior political experience, and reelection rate as other Republicans. Multivariate analysis finds that Tea Party membership and endorsement have no impact on electoral outcome when other political factors are controlled for (e.g., incumbency, running for an open seat, quality of opposing candidate, prior political experience, financial resources, and Obama’s vote). Consequently, the success of Tea Party candidates depends on acquiring the traditional political resources, having weak opponents, and running in favorably disposed constituencies rather than identification with this highly visible political movement.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Science and Politics Vol.47, No.4; Oct.2014: p.799-805
Journal SourcePolitical Science and Politics 2014-12 47, 4
Standard NumberPolitical Movement