articleAmerican Journal of Political ScienceJan 1, 2007Closed access

Competing Principals, Political Institutions, and Party Unity in Legislative Voting

Dartmouth College · Dartmouth Hospital

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Abstract

Almost all legislators are subordinate to party leadership within their assemblies. Institutional factors shape whether, and to what degree, legislators are also subject to pressure from other principals whose demands may conflict with those of party leaders. This article presents a set of hypotheses on the nature of competing pressures driven by formal political institutions and tests the hypotheses against a new dataset of legislative votes from across 19 different countries. Voting unity is lower where legislators are elected under rules that provide for intraparty competition than where party lists are closed, marginally lower in federal than unitary systems, and the effects on party unity of being in…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Legislature
  • Unitary state
  • Political science
  • Opposition (politics)
  • Voting
  • Presidential system
  • Divided government
  • Politics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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