Simultaneous elections in a polarized society make single-party sweeps more likely

Abstract

In a country with many elections, it may prove economically expedient to hold multiple elections simultaneously on a common polling date. We show that in a polarized society, in which each voter has a preferred party, an increase in the simultaneity of polling will increase the likelihood of a single-party sweep, namely, it will become more likely that a single party wins all the elections. In fact we show that the sweep probability goes up for every party. Thus the phenomenon we describe is independent of the ``coattail'' or ``down-ballot'' effect of a popular leader. It is a systemic and persistent macroscopic political change, effected by a combination of political polarization and simultaneity of polling. Our result holds under fairly general conditions and is applicable to many common real-world electoral systems, including first-past-the-post (most voters) and party list proportional representation (most countries). In the course of our proof, we obtain a generalization of the well-known Harris correlation inequality.

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