Subject: Form submission: Undergraduate Thesis Deposited From: "Wilson via Fondren Library" Date: 5/9/2019, 4:37 PM To: mpr1@rice.edu Submitted on Thursday, May 9, 2019 - 4:37pm Submitted by anonymous user: 98.201.178.236 Submitted values are: First Name Chloe Last Name Wilson Email Address cmw14@rice.edu Title of the Thesis Early Campaign Contact and Voter Turnout in the 2018 Texas State Senate District 6 Special Election Date of Thesis Submission 04/2019 Academic Department Political Science Advisor's Name Dr. Robert Stein Keywords elections, campaigns, voting, early voting Abstract The creation of early in person (EIP) voting periods has been a popular policy implemented by state legislatures seeking to increase voter turnout through decreasing the costs of going to the polls. The efficacy of EIP voting has been questioned in the literature. EIP voting has, however, changed the way in which campaigns are run (Burden et al 2014; Hamel et al 2018). Using individual-level, paid phone-bank call data from the Ana Hernandez campaign for the Texas State Senate District 6 special election held on December 11, 2018 and district-wide voter history data I examine the efficacy of campaign contact under early voting conditions. I find this contact to be ineffective, once vote history is taken into account. A history of voting in the 2018 primary election and 2018 bond elections is a much stronger predictor of turning out in the election studied. This analysis indicates that contacted voters who turned out were more likely self-motivated to vote rather than mobilized through contact, complicating Arceneaux and Nickerson’s (2009) contingency model of campaign contact, which states that high propensity voters are the most cost effective to turn out through campaign contact. These findings have important implications regarding the status quo model of campaign contact currently implemented and how it can be modified to be both more effective in turning out voters in low salience elections. Assign DOI to work? Yes Link to PDF of Final Version of Thesis https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oHd65FPMueoszjVMbEBedIyYjFulXIW5/view?usp=sharing Select a Copyright Statement Creative Commons License- Attribution (CC BY) I agree to deposit my work under the terms of the Deposit Licences Yes The results of this submission may be viewed at: https://library.rice.edu/node/674/submission/26975