Counterfactual Analysis and Inference With Nonstationary Data

Author(s):  
Ricardo Masini ◽  
Marcelo C. Medeiros
Author(s):  
Wendy J. Schiller ◽  
Charles Stewart

This chapter integrates findings on indirect elections with current scholarship on the impact of the adoption of the Seventeenth Amendment and onset of direct elections. It constructs a comprehensive counterfactual analysis that helps demonstrate what the political outcomes would have been with direct elections in place since the founding, and in contrast, what Senate elections would look like after 1913 if indirect elections were still in place. It also addresses the question of whether U.S. senators represented states as units and responded to state governmental concerns more under the indirect system than they do under direct elections. It argues that indirect election had little impact on the Senate's overall partisan composition prior to 1913. Contrary to widespread belief, had direct election been in effect during the years immediately preceding the Seventeenth Amendment's passage, Republicans, not Democrats, would have benefited.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlo Drago ◽  
Roberto Ricciuti ◽  
Alberto Rinaldi ◽  
Michelangelo Vasta

2014 ◽  
Vol 123 (1) ◽  
pp. 26-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Kuckuck ◽  
Frank Westermann

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