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Public Opinion Quarterly Advance Access originally published online on February 25, 2007
Public Opinion Quarterly 2007 71(1):67-90; doi:10.1093/poq/nfl045
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Association for Public Opinion Research. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

Good Excuses: Understanding Who Votes With An Improved Turnout Question

Brian Duff, Michael J. Hanmer, Won-Ho Park and Ismail K. White

Address Correspondence to Ismail K. White; e-mail: whiteik{at}mail.la.utexas.edu.

Utilizing studies which validate voter turnout, previous researchers have been able to identify a strong tendency for individuals to report voting when they in fact did not. In this article, we assess the effectiveness of a new turnout question on reducing voter over-reporting in the National Election Study. Providing respondents with socially acceptable excuses for not voting, we found that this alternate question significantly reduces the over-reporting of turnout in the 2002 National Election Study by about 8 percentage points. Moreover, our analysis reveals that with the new question wording, estimates of the turnout rate for those usually thought to be the least likely to vote are considerably lower than estimates using the traditional question. Thus, not only did the experiment work to significantly reduce over-reporting, the new question provides deeper insights into the voting behavior of the American electorate that has implications for both scholars and reformers.


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