Rejecting compromise : legislators' fear of primary voters

Bibliographic Information

Rejecting compromise : legislators' fear of primary voters

Sarah E. Anderson, Daniel M. Butler, Laurel Harbridge-Yong

Cambridge University Press, 2020

  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 147-167) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Legislative solutions to pressing problems like balancing the budget, climate change, and poverty usually require compromise. Yet national, state, and local legislators often reject compromise proposals that would move policy in their preferred direction. Why do legislators reject such agreements? This engaging and relevant investigation into how politicians think reveals that legislators refuse compromise - and exacerbate gridlock - because they fear punishment from voters in primary elections. Prioritizing these electoral interests can lead lawmakers to act in ways that hurt their policy interests and also overlook the broader electorate's preferences by representing only a subset of voters with rigid positions. With their solution-oriented approach, Anderson, Butler, and Harbridge-Yong demonstrate that improving the likelihood of legislative compromise may require moving negotiations outside of the public spotlight. Highlighting key electoral motives underlying polarization, this book is an excellent resource for scholars and students studying Congress, American politics, public policy, and political behavior.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Rejecting compromise, getting gridlock
  • 2. Legislators reject half-loaf compromises
  • 3. Legislators reject half-loaf compromises because they fear voter retribution
  • 4. Primary voters as the source of punishment
  • 5. Voter punishment is rare but real
  • 6. Structuring negotiations in the shadow of primary voter punishment
  • 7. Compromise, voter punishment in primaries, and legislative gridlock
  • References.

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