Legislative parties respond to the changing preferences of the citizens they represent through the adaptation and replacement of their members. This creates an indirect electoral connection between the aggregate preferences of citizens and the aggregate behavior of legislative parties. In this research, I argue that legislators from moderate districts are the least likely to support their legislative parties and most likely to vote moderately during roll call votes. I also argue that states with low ideological variance among citizens are the most likely to have moderate districts. This implies that states with ideologically heterogeneous populations are more likely to have homogeneous, ideologically extreme legislative parties. Using measu...
Congressional districts create two levels of representation. Studies of representation focus on a di...
We know that elite polarization and mass sorting have led to an explosion of hostility between parti...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Spatial proximity theories of representation focus on the importance of the average views of constit...
Does partisan competition explain why some legislatures are more efficient at processing legislation...
The increasing partisanship and polarization present Congress has been subject to a great deal of st...
Using new data on roll-call voting of U.S. state legislators and public opinion in their districts, ...
textI focus on three district-level demographic variables indicative of contemporary social cleavage...
Primary voters are frequently characterized as an ideologically extreme subset of their party, and t...
Many advocate for political reforms intended to resolve apparent disjunctures between politicians' i...
The development and elaboration of the spatial theory of voting has contributed greatly to the study...
Legislators are often placed in the position of representing the interests of their constituents aga...
Scholars and pundits have long noted the dominance of the American two-party system, but we know rel...
the roll-call data collection effort. We also thank the following for exemplary research assistance:...
Over the past few decades, there has been a considerable increase in the level of partisan conflict....
Congressional districts create two levels of representation. Studies of representation focus on a di...
We know that elite polarization and mass sorting have led to an explosion of hostility between parti...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Spatial proximity theories of representation focus on the importance of the average views of constit...
Does partisan competition explain why some legislatures are more efficient at processing legislation...
The increasing partisanship and polarization present Congress has been subject to a great deal of st...
Using new data on roll-call voting of U.S. state legislators and public opinion in their districts, ...
textI focus on three district-level demographic variables indicative of contemporary social cleavage...
Primary voters are frequently characterized as an ideologically extreme subset of their party, and t...
Many advocate for political reforms intended to resolve apparent disjunctures between politicians' i...
The development and elaboration of the spatial theory of voting has contributed greatly to the study...
Legislators are often placed in the position of representing the interests of their constituents aga...
Scholars and pundits have long noted the dominance of the American two-party system, but we know rel...
the roll-call data collection effort. We also thank the following for exemplary research assistance:...
Over the past few decades, there has been a considerable increase in the level of partisan conflict....
Congressional districts create two levels of representation. Studies of representation focus on a di...
We know that elite polarization and mass sorting have led to an explosion of hostility between parti...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...