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The influence of party : evidence from the state legislatures

By: WRIGHT, Gerald C.
Contributor(s): SCHAFFNER, Brian F.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: American Political Science Association, 2002American Political Science Review 96, 2, p. 367-379Abstract: American legislative studies in recent years have been occupied to a large degree with the question of the effects of political parties on the policy behavior of elected legislators, with most of the research focusing on the U.S. Congress. We undertake a comparative analysis of state legislatures for a window into the character and extent of party`s effects. Specifically, we compare the impact of party on the partisan polarization and dimensionality of compaign issue stances and roll call voting in the Kansas Senate and the largely comparable, though nonpartisan, Nebraska Unicameral. This comparison offers us a nice quasi-experiment to assess the impact of party by stablishing a baseline condition in Nebraska for what happens when party is absent. We argue that party lends order to conflict, producing the ideological low-dimensional space that is a trademark of American politics. Where parties are not active in the legislature - Nebraska is our test case - the clear structure found in partisan politics disapperas. This works to server the connection between voters and their elected representatives and, with in, the likelihood of electoral accountability that is essential for the health of liberal democracy
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American legislative studies in recent years have been occupied to a large degree with the question of the effects of political parties on the policy behavior of elected legislators, with most of the research focusing on the U.S. Congress. We undertake a comparative analysis of state legislatures for a window into the character and extent of party`s effects. Specifically, we compare the impact of party on the partisan polarization and dimensionality of compaign issue stances and roll call voting in the Kansas Senate and the largely comparable, though nonpartisan, Nebraska Unicameral. This comparison offers us a nice quasi-experiment to assess the impact of party by stablishing a baseline condition in Nebraska for what happens when party is absent. We argue that party lends order to conflict, producing the ideological low-dimensional space that is a trademark of American politics. Where parties are not active in the legislature - Nebraska is our test case - the clear structure found in partisan politics disapperas. This works to server the connection between voters and their elected representatives and, with in, the likelihood of electoral accountability that is essential for the health of liberal democracy

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