On Measuring Partisanship in Roll Call Voting: The U.S. House of Representatives, 1877-1999
38 Pages Posted: 1 Jul 2008
Abstract
We propose a method of assessing party influence, based on a spatial model. Our method provides the first test of whether observed values of the widely used Rice index of party dissimilarity are consistent with a "partyless" null model. It also avoids problems that beset previous estimators. Substantively, we find evidence of party influence in all but one Congress since 1877. Moreover, our indicator of party pressure is systematically higher for the sorts of roll calls that party theorists believe are more pressured-procedural, organizational and label-defining votes. Our results refute the widespread notion that parties in the House have typically had negligible influence on roll call voting behavior. They also document important changes in party influence associated with the packing of the Rules Committee in 1961 and the procedural reforms of 1973.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
By James J. Heckman and James M. Snyder
-
The Hunt for Party Discipline in Congress
By Nolan Mccarty, Keith T. Poole, ...
-
By Keith T. Poole and Howard Rosenthal
-
The Geometry of Multidimensional Quadratic Utility in Models of Parliamentary Roll Call Voting
-
Agenda Power in the Japanese House of Representatives
By Gary W. Cox, Mikitaka Masuyama, ...
-
Congressional Party Defection in American History
By Timothy P. Nokken and Keith T. Poole