Study: U.S. presidential elections can influence local prosecutor races
New political science research explores the increased nationalization of local elections
National politics don鈥檛 stay in the federal arena. Instead, they are increasingly filtering down to local races 鈥 including the prosecutor鈥檚 office.
Having the same political party alignment as a successful U.S. presidential candidate gives an incumbent prosecutor a significant edge in re-election, according to recent research by 黑料视频 Political Science Professor Jeffrey L. Yates. Local prosecutors are important and powerful actors in the criminal justice system, he pointed out.
鈥淭hey have a lot of discretion and impact, especially since the vast majority of dispositions in the criminal justice system are negotiated pleas rather than trial outcomes,鈥 Yates said.
Co-authored by Jamie L. Carson of the University of Georgia, Damon Cann of Utah State University and Ronald F. Wright of Wake Forest University, 鈥淭he Increasing Nationalization of Local Elections: The Case of Prosecutors鈥 recently appeared in Political Research Quarterly. The researchers analyzed races from 2012 to 2020 in the nation鈥檚 top 200 districts by population.
鈥淚鈥檝e always been interested in criminal justice policy and politics and noticed that there had been almost nothing written on prosecutor elections in political science. In fact, relatively little empirical work had been done on it in any field,鈥 Yates said.
That prompted a conversation with co-author Wright, who was the first to do empirical work on the topic. They began collecting data, which has led to a number of academic papers, Yates said.
The United States is the only country in the world in which local prosecutors are elected; 45 states elect their prosecutors, with Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey and Rhode Island as the exceptions. However, the researchers noted that this wasn鈥檛 always the case; the post was made by appointment until the mid-1800s.
鈥淲hile people want prosecutors to have independence, they also want them to be accountable to the citizenry. The change in the 19th century from appointed to elected prosecutors was part of a broader change in approaches to government in which people wanted more control over government, fewer patronage appointments and more responsive officials,鈥 Yates explained.
Through the decades, American politics has undergone a steady shift that has narrowed the division between national and local politics, he observed. Tip O鈥橬eill, speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1977 to 1987, popularized the phrase 鈥渁ll politics is local,鈥 although the phrase itself is believed to date back much earlier.
鈥淟ocal politicians can find themselves 鈥 and their campaigns 鈥 embroiled in national-level issues,鈥 Yates said.
The researchers found that incumbent prosecutors gain a meaningful advantage if they are the same party as the U.S. president, one that鈥檚 not easy for challengers to overcome. Other influences were statistically significant, although smaller when compared to the presidential party boost: Higher crime rates tend to give an advantage to an incumbent, for example, and female incumbents are less likely to win, likely due to the influence of gender stereotypes.
The nationalization of local elections has a downside. Yates noted that local officials could end up running on issues they don鈥檛 actually have the power to directly affect rather than those more pertinent to the local level.
The researchers are currently working on subsequent papers that take a deeper look into the subject, Yates said.
鈥淲e hope to highlight the relevancy and importance of prosecutor elections,鈥 he added. 鈥淭hey are powerful officials, and these elections are becoming more salient and competitive.鈥