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The Shrinking Middle in the US Congress

By: FLEISHER, Richard; BOND, John R.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, July 2004British Journal of Political Science 34, 4, p. 429-451Abstract: The virtual disappearance of moderate and cross-pressured members from the US Congress is analyses in this article. There were substantial numbers of these partisan non-conformists in both parties and both chambers until the early 1980s when the middle began to shrink. This trend continued and accelerated in the 1990s. Partisan non-conformists disappeared through replacement and conversion. When moderate and cross-pressured members left Congress, their replacements were much more likely to be partisans in the 1980s and 1990s than they had been in earlier decades. The occurrence of some type of conversion (a shift towards the party's ideological mainstream or a party switch) is also much more common in recent decades. We present evidence that the shrinking in Congress resulted from electoral changes
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The virtual disappearance of moderate and cross-pressured members from the US Congress is analyses in this article. There were substantial numbers of these partisan non-conformists in both parties and both chambers until the early 1980s when the middle began to shrink. This trend continued and accelerated in the 1990s. Partisan non-conformists disappeared through replacement and conversion. When moderate and cross-pressured members left Congress, their replacements were much more likely to be partisans in the 1980s and 1990s than they had been in earlier decades. The occurrence of some type of conversion (a shift towards the party's ideological mainstream or a party switch) is also much more common in recent decades. We present evidence that the shrinking in Congress resulted from electoral changes

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