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Partisan Polarization and Congressional Accountability in House Elections
by
Jones, David R.
in
Accountability
/ Bipolarization
/ Congressional districts
/ Congressional elections
/ Congressional voting
/ Disloyalty
/ Elections
/ Elections to the lower chamber
/ Electoral volatility
/ Empirical research
/ Evaluation
/ Incumbency
/ Incumbents
/ Legislative Bodies
/ Legislators
/ Legislatures
/ Loyalty
/ Majorities
/ Organization theory
/ Partisanship
/ Polarization
/ Political majority
/ Political parties
/ Political partisanship
/ Political science
/ Presidential elections
/ Public opinion
/ Rating
/ Ratings & rankings
/ Safety
/ U.S.A
/ Voting
2010
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Partisan Polarization and Congressional Accountability in House Elections
by
Jones, David R.
in
Accountability
/ Bipolarization
/ Congressional districts
/ Congressional elections
/ Congressional voting
/ Disloyalty
/ Elections
/ Elections to the lower chamber
/ Electoral volatility
/ Empirical research
/ Evaluation
/ Incumbency
/ Incumbents
/ Legislative Bodies
/ Legislators
/ Legislatures
/ Loyalty
/ Majorities
/ Organization theory
/ Partisanship
/ Polarization
/ Political majority
/ Political parties
/ Political partisanship
/ Political science
/ Presidential elections
/ Public opinion
/ Rating
/ Ratings & rankings
/ Safety
/ U.S.A
/ Voting
2010
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Partisan Polarization and Congressional Accountability in House Elections
by
Jones, David R.
in
Accountability
/ Bipolarization
/ Congressional districts
/ Congressional elections
/ Congressional voting
/ Disloyalty
/ Elections
/ Elections to the lower chamber
/ Electoral volatility
/ Empirical research
/ Evaluation
/ Incumbency
/ Incumbents
/ Legislative Bodies
/ Legislators
/ Legislatures
/ Loyalty
/ Majorities
/ Organization theory
/ Partisanship
/ Polarization
/ Political majority
/ Political parties
/ Political partisanship
/ Political science
/ Presidential elections
/ Public opinion
/ Rating
/ Ratings & rankings
/ Safety
/ U.S.A
/ Voting
2010
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Partisan Polarization and Congressional Accountability in House Elections
Journal Article
Partisan Polarization and Congressional Accountability in House Elections
2010
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Overview
Early research led scholars to believe that institutional accountability in Congress is lacking because public evaluations of its collective performance do not affect the reelection of its members. However, a changed partisan environment along with new empirical evidence raises unanswered questions about the effect of congressional performance on incumbents' electoral outcomes over time. Analysis of House reelection races across the last several decades produces important findings: (1) low congressional approval ratings generally reduce the electoral margins of majority party incumbents and increase margins for minority party incumbents; (2) partisan polarization in the House increases the magnitude of this partisan differential, mainly through increased electoral accountability among majority party incumbents; (3) these electoral effects of congressional performance ratings hold largely irrespective of a member's individual party loyalty or seat safety. These findings carry significant implications for partisan theories of legislative organization and help explain salient features of recent Congresses.
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