D. Stephen Voss

Instructor

University of Kentucky Department of Political Science


The Missing Middle:

Why Median-Voter Theory Can’t Save Democrats from Singing the Boll-Weevil Blues.

By David Lublin and D. Stephen Voss

Formal citation:
Lublin, David, and D. Stephen Voss. 2003 (forthcoming). "The Missing Middle: Why Median-Voter Theory Can’t Save Democrats from Singing the Boll-Weevil Blues." Journal of Politics 65(February).

Summary: Racial redistricting decimated the southern congressional districts once represented by centrist Democrats. Electoral maps drawn in the 1990s instead helped polarize the South’s congressional delegation into a mixture of minority Democrats and hard-right Republicans, creating a more-favorable environment for conservative legislation. As a method for enhancing black representation, redistricting backfired. We directly challenge the work of Ken Shotts, who contradicts our "perverse effects" argument using a median-voter approach. We argue that his models to assess the influence of racial redistricting create their own rosy conclusions. Most importantly, his analysis neglects the dramatic effect of 1994’s partisan shift, which moved the House median rightward and so causes his model to treat pre-1990s moderate Democrats as equivalent to post-1990s conservative Republicans.

This article begins with an overview of the research agenda Lublin and I have pursued to assess theoretically the partisan effects of redistricting. It therefore encapsulates the diverse findings of several articles:

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