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Making Political Choices : Canada and the United States

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Recent national elections in Canada and the United States have been exciting, consequential contests.

In the 2004 federal election in Canada, the Liberal Party narrowly clung to power after a volatile and bitter battle with the new Conservative Party.

In 2006, the Conservative Party won a fragile victory, replacing the scandal-ridden Liberal government.

In the 2000 American presidential election, Republican George W.

Bush became the first candidate in over 100 years to capture the presidency without a majority popular vote.

Four years later, Bush finally attained a narrow popular mandate but only after a hard fought campaign.

Then, in 2006, the Republicans suffered a stunning reversal of political fortune, losing control of both Houses of Congress, as public opinion turned massively against the president. In Making Political Choices: Canada and the United States, Harold Clarke, Allan Kornberg, and Thomas Scotto employ a wealth of new survey data to describe these elections and evaluate competing theories of party support and voter turnout.

While examining various arguments, the authors contend that a valence politics model provides a powerful explanation of voting behavior in Canada, the United States, and other mature democracies.

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RRP £41.00
Product Details
University of Toronto Press
0802096743 / 9780802096746
Paperback / softback
324.971
01/11/2008
Canada
304 pages
148 x 224 mm, 540 grams