Do Early Primary States Still Pick Presidents? episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 20, 2019 · 46 MIN

Do Early Primary States Still Pick Presidents?

from The Science of Politics · host Niskanen Center

Although the 2020 presidential candidates are investing huge shares of their time and resources in Iowa and New Hampshire, new research suggests early-state momentum may not matter much in our nationalized presidential race. John Sides finds that Donald Trump dominated media coverage well before election results in 2016, crowding out his opponents. Marc Trussler finds that state election victories didn’t seem to cause bigger-than-normal shifts in polls in 2016, with any campaign day just as likely to see an influential media event. Momentum may be dying with the growth of pre-primary media coverage and an earlier cementing of candidate coalitions. Photo credit: Excel23 under CC Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:PeteButtigieg2020SBI.jpg

Although the 2020 presidential candidates are investing huge shares of their time and resources in Iowa and New Hampshire, new research suggests early-state momentum may not matter much in our nationalized presidential race. John Sides finds that Donald Trump dominated media coverage well before election results in 2016, crowding out his opponents. Marc Trussler finds that state election victories didn’t seem to cause bigger-than-normal shifts in polls in 2016, with any campaign day just as likely to see an influential media event. Momentum may be dying with the growth of pre-primary media coverage and an earlier cementing of candidate coalitions. Photo credit: Excel23 under CC Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:PeteButtigieg2020SBI.jpg

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Do Early Primary States Still Pick Presidents?

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This episode was published on November 20, 2019.

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Although the 2020 presidential candidates are investing huge shares of their time and resources in Iowa and New Hampshire, new research suggests early-state momentum may not matter much in our nationalized presidential race. John Sides finds that...

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