Abstract

Party elites may hinder racial and ethnic minorities from winning public office by withholding resources. Prior studies have explored the distribution of money, media access, and party-list positions. In Brazil, party elites provide each candidate with a unique identification number. Voters must enter their preferred candidate’s identification number into an electronic voting machine to register their support. In this article, we replicate and extend Bueno and Dunning’s (2017) analysis of candidate identification numbers. They conclude that party elites do not provide white candidates with superior identification numbers than non-whites. We contend that assessing intraparty variation is theoretically and methodologically warranted. Using party fixed effects, we find that party elites provide non-white candidates with worse identification numbers than whites. We demonstrate that our findings are generalisable using data from other elections. Moreover, we show that party elites also withhold advantageous numbers from women and political novices.

Highlights

  • In Latin America, public officials routinely do not reflect the ethnic and racial diversity of the citizenry that they are expected to represent

  • Some studies emphasise voter bias as a key explanation for why Afro-Brazilians are not elected in proportion to their population size (Aguilar et al, 2015a, 2015b; Janusz, 2018; Mitchell Walthour, 2018)

  • One resource that party elites have exclusive control over is candidate identification numbers, some of which are more valuable than others

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Summary

Introduction

In Latin America, public officials routinely do not reflect the ethnic and racial diversity of the citizenry that they are expected to represent. Drawing on the data from a variety of Brazilian elections, we find strong evidence that party elites provide white candidates with superior identification numbers than Afro-Brazilians. Party elites provide certain types of candidates with more advantageous identification numbers than others and therein perpetuate the political underrepresentation of Afro-Brazilians. Bueno and Dunning (2017) posit that party elites provide Afro-Brazilian candidates with worse identification numbers than white candidates based on the belief that voters prefer white candidates.

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