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36 Legis. Stud. Q. 1 (2011)

handle is hein.journals/lgvessqy36 and id is 1 raw text is: 






Introduction


     Legislatures are almost always complicated organizations oper-
ating in complex governing structures. Consequently, it is not surpris-
ing that most of the studies in this issue of the Quarterly emphasize the
conditional nature of many important relationships involving legisla-
tures and legislators.
     The question of whether voters hold representatives responsible
for their votes has long attracted scholarly attention because of the
answer's implications for democratic theory. A new tack on this topic
is offered by Brandice Canes-Wrone, William Minozzi, and  Jessica
Bonney  Reveley. The authors examine  U.S. House  votes on crime
policies and environmental policies between 1988 and 2004 to see if
voters punish members who take unpopular positions on issues that are
closely identified with or owned by a particular party. Using both OLS
and a matching procedure, they find that issue salience largely drives
punishment. When  crime was an important issue in 1994, 1996, and
1998, voters penalized Democrats who voted on the soft side of crime
legislation because they were seen as being out of step with popular
demands  on  an issue where their party's position was suspect. In
contrast, voters never considered environmental issues to be  of
paramount  importance during this span of elections; consequently,
Republicans who voted out of step with voter preferences on that set of
issues were  not punished, even though  their party position was
unpopular. As the authors note, this intriguing finding should be tested
across a number of other issues, both those that have at some point
been highly salient and others that only lurk in the background.
     An  unusual  aspect of the European   Parliament is that its
members  must be responsive to two principals: their national party and
their European party group. The question of when European parlia-
ment members   are more responsive or less responsive to the policy
positions of each of the two principals is tackled by Ren6 Lindst dt,
Jonathan B. Slapin, and Ryan J. Vander Wielen. Employing a decision-
theoretic model of member  behavior, the authors deduce that when
European  Parliament elections are proximate, European Parliament
members  shift their policy positions toward those of their national
parties. In turn, European Parliament party groups exert greater influ-
ence on European  Parliament member  preferences at the third-year
midpoint of their term. These relationships are confirmed through a

LEGISLATIVE   STUDIES  QUARTERLY, XXXVI, 1, February   2011    1
DOI: 10.1111/j.1939-9162.2010.00001.x
© 2011 The Comparative Legislative Research Center of The University of Iowa

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