Vote Buying or Turnout Buying? Machine Politics and the Secret Ballot
University of California System · University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
Scholars typically understand vote buying as offering particularistic benefits in exchange for vote choices. This depiction of vote buying presents a puzzle: with the secret ballot, what prevents individuals from accepting rewards and then voting as they wish? An alternative explanation, which I term “turnout buying,” suggests why parties might offer rewards even if they cannot monitor vote choices. By rewarding unmobilized supporters for showing up at the polls, parties can activate their passive constituencies. Because turnout buying targets supporters, it only requires monitoring whether individuals vote. Much of what scholars interpret as vote buying may actually be turnout buying. Reward targeting helps…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 92.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Turnout
- Ballot
- Secret ballot
- Contingent vote
- Voting
- Politics
- Advertising
- Political science