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Come hell or high water: An investigation of the effects of a natural disaster on a local election

How is electoral support for incumbent candidates shaped by natural disasters? Do voters in districts newly recovering from a national disaster punish or reward incumbents for their response to the disaster when compared to their counterparts in unaffected districts? The City of Calgary is used here...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Electoral studies 2016-09, Vol.43, p.85-94
Main Authors: Bodet, Marc André, Thomas, Melanee, Tessier, Charles
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:How is electoral support for incumbent candidates shaped by natural disasters? Do voters in districts newly recovering from a national disaster punish or reward incumbents for their response to the disaster when compared to their counterparts in unaffected districts? The City of Calgary is used here as a case study. On 20 June 2013, the Bow and Elbow rivers flooded in the Calgary, devastating 26 neighborhoods and displacing approximately 75,000 people, or 7 per cent of the city's population. Four months later, a municipal election was held. When analyzed as a natural experiment, results suggest that support for the incumbent mayor increased city-wide between the 2010 and the 2013 elections, but at a lower rate in areas that experienced residential flooding. However, the flood did not produce equivalent treatment and control groups, as flooded areas differ systematically from areas that were not flooded in ways key to the election outcome. When analyzed more conservatively, results show that the flood had no effect on incumbent support or voter turnout. Thus, this disaster introduces a note of caution into the literature examining the effects of natural disasters on electoral behavior. •We study the effects of natural disasters on incumbent support and turnout.•We use the 2013 Calgary flood as a case study.•Contrary to expectations, the flood had no significant effect on the support for the incumbent.•Contrary to expectations, the flood had no significant effect on voter turnout.
ISSN:0261-3794
1873-6890
DOI:10.1016/j.electstud.2016.06.003