<jats:p>Election-oriented elites are expected to emphasize issues on which their party possesses ‘issue ownership’ during campaigns. This article extends those theories to the content of executive and legislative agendas. Arguing that executives have incentives to pursue their party’s owned issues in the legislature, it theorizes three conditions under which these incentives are constrained: when governments are responsive to issues prioritized by the public, when a party has a stronger electoral mandate and under divided government. The theory is tested using time-series analyses of policy agendas of US congressional statutes and State of the Union addresses (1947–2012) and UK acts of Parliament and the Queen’s Speech (1950–2010). Th...
Scholars of politics have long endeavored to identify the conditions under which elected officials r...
There are conflicting beliefs about the influence of parties on policy. Sceptical observers point to...
This article addresses the relationship between latent predispositions and political campaign commun...
Election-oriented elites are expected to emphasize issues on which their party possesses ‘issue owne...
International audienceThis article develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy ag...
This article develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas, where parties a...
This article develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas, where parties a...
This article develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas, where parties a...
Parties campaign on a range of topics to attract diverse support. Little research, however, looks at...
Dynamic agenda representation can be understood through the transmission of the priorities of the pu...
This paper develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas, where parties and...
Political parties matter for government outcomes. Despite this general finding for political science...
Political parties matter for government outcomes. Despite this general finding for political scienc...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
Empirical results indicate that politicians exploit issue ownership—the degree to which the public t...
Scholars of politics have long endeavored to identify the conditions under which elected officials r...
There are conflicting beliefs about the influence of parties on policy. Sceptical observers point to...
This article addresses the relationship between latent predispositions and political campaign commun...
Election-oriented elites are expected to emphasize issues on which their party possesses ‘issue owne...
International audienceThis article develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy ag...
This article develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas, where parties a...
This article develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas, where parties a...
This article develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas, where parties a...
Parties campaign on a range of topics to attract diverse support. Little research, however, looks at...
Dynamic agenda representation can be understood through the transmission of the priorities of the pu...
This paper develops an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas, where parties and...
Political parties matter for government outcomes. Despite this general finding for political science...
Political parties matter for government outcomes. Despite this general finding for political scienc...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
Empirical results indicate that politicians exploit issue ownership—the degree to which the public t...
Scholars of politics have long endeavored to identify the conditions under which elected officials r...
There are conflicting beliefs about the influence of parties on policy. Sceptical observers point to...
This article addresses the relationship between latent predispositions and political campaign commun...