Constituency Effects and Legislative Dissent Under Closed-List Proportional Representation

According to conventional wisdom, closed-list proportional representation (CLPR) electoral systems create incentives for legislators to favor the party line over their voters’ positions. However, electoral incentives may induce party leaders to tolerate “shirking” by some legislators, even under CLP...

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Veröffentlicht in:Latin American politics and society 2021-05, Vol.63 (2), p.78-99
Hauptverfasser: Alemán, Eduardo, Micozzi, Juan Pablo, Pinto, Pablo M., Saiegh, Sebastián
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container_title Latin American politics and society
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creator Alemán, Eduardo
Micozzi, Juan Pablo
Pinto, Pablo M.
Saiegh, Sebastián
description According to conventional wisdom, closed-list proportional representation (CLPR) electoral systems create incentives for legislators to favor the party line over their voters’ positions. However, electoral incentives may induce party leaders to tolerate “shirking” by some legislators, even under CLPR. This study argues that in considering whose deviations from the party line should be tolerated, party leaders exploit differences in voters’ relative electoral influence resulting from malapportionment. We expect defections in roll call votes to be more likely among legislators elected from overrepresented districts than among those from other districts. We empirically test this claim using data on Argentine legislators’ voting records and a unique dataset of estimates of voters’ and legislators’ placements in a common ideological space. Our findings suggest that even under electoral rules known for promoting unified parties, we should expect strategic defections to please voters, which can be advantageous for the party’s electoral fortunes.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/lap.2021.6
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; EBSCOhost Political Science Complete; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Apportionment
Constituents
Dissent
Districts
Elections
Electoral systems
Ideology
Incentives
Influence
Leadership
Legislators
Political leadership
Proportional representation
Reputations
Roll call
Voter behavior
Voters
Voting
Voting rules
Wisdom
title Constituency Effects and Legislative Dissent Under Closed-List Proportional Representation
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