Question

A common belief among political analysts is that someone running for his or her party's nomination for president of the United States must choose a different strategy once the nomination is secured. To be nominated, the candidate must appeal to voters from one party - Democrat or Republican - but in a general election a party's nominee must appeal to voters from both parties as well as independent voters. Which of the following offers the best explanation for this change in strategy?
A) the Arrow impossibility theorem
B) the voting paradox
C) the median voter theorem
D) rent seeking

Answer

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