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The 2014 Midterm in the Longest Run: The Puzzle of a Modern Era

  • Byron E. Shafer

    Byron E. Shafer is Glenn B. & Cleone Orr Hawkins Chair of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin and author, most recently, of The American Political Landscape (Harvard, 2014) with Richard H. Spady.

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    , Regina L. Wagner

    Regina L. Wagner is completing a doctoral dissertation at the University of Wisconsin on “Representing Women: Substantive versus Descriptive Representation and the Conceptualization of ‘Women’s Interests.’”

    und Pär Jason Engle

    Pär Jason Engle is completing a doctoral dissertation at the University of Wisconsin on “The Political Contours of Survey Response Patterns.”

Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 28. Januar 2015
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Abstract

Comparisons across even the longest time-span cannot foretell the future. What they can do is generate the available analogies to what has just happened, isolate the patterned outcomes that have preceded it over time, and locate the current outcome in the most recent sequence of results. Accordingly, this article begins with the contests that received the most attention in 2014 – and were consensually regarded as the most consequential – namely those in the Senate. It moves to corresponding contests in the House, considering Senate and House together, as Congress. And it finishes with the composite picture for the elective institutions of American national government, namely Senate, House, and Presidency. Some automatic future does not thereby appear, but various analogies become untenable, various alleged patterns can be dismissed as irrelevant, and the new political world can be much more richly described. Still, what ultimately results is an insistent puzzle about a modern world beginning around 1980 and differing consequentially from everything that went before.


Corresponding author: Byron E. Shafer, Department of Political Science, 1050 Bascom Mall, Madison, WI 53706, USA, e-mail:

About the authors

Byron E. Shafer

Byron E. Shafer is Glenn B. & Cleone Orr Hawkins Chair of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin and author, most recently, of The American Political Landscape (Harvard, 2014) with Richard H. Spady.

Regina L. Wagner

Regina L. Wagner is completing a doctoral dissertation at the University of Wisconsin on “Representing Women: Substantive versus Descriptive Representation and the Conceptualization of ‘Women’s Interests.’”

Pär Jason Engle

Pär Jason Engle is completing a doctoral dissertation at the University of Wisconsin on “The Political Contours of Survey Response Patterns.”

Acknowledgments

Special thanks to Peter Argersinger, Michael Holt, William Egar, and Jack Edelson for their very helpful corrections to earlier drafts. Collectively, they have guaranteed that the errors which remain are truly ours.

Published Online: 2015-1-28
Published in Print: 2014-12-1

©2014 by De Gruyter

Heruntergeladen am 11.1.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/for-2014-5025/html
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