| Volume 26, Number 2, July 2003 | Click here for PDF version of this page. |
Gary
Copeland
Professor of Political
Science
University of Oklahoma
Congressional scholars
can reasonably be held to have taken the lead in developing
theory about delegation of authority from the legislative to
the executive branch. KiewietÕs and
McCubbins's The Logic of Congressional Delegation broke new ground in
explaining the rational foundations of congressional behavior
and its consequences for the bureaucracy. Like
many other studies of the Congress over the past two decades,
these authors adopt a rational choice framework for explaining
congressional action. Such studies have
provided real insight into the Congress, but none have been
able to produce a general theory of legislative action because
their focus has been restricted to the Congress. There
is a real need to test hypotheses derived from congressional
studies in other legislative venues.
To
the rescue come Huber and Shipan. Deliberative
Discretion
examines the relationship between legislatures and executives in a
comparative context. Taking as
their primary source of data the text of laws, the authors
offer a theory of legislative discretion and design, and in
consequence the extent to which legislators in drafting law
choose to delegate discretionary power to bureaucrats. Observing
variation across regimes, they seek to understand why
legislators may choose to delegate authority to bureaucrats and how the
extent of delegation may vary according to regime type. They
also address the question of, who is empowered by legislative
delegation of authority to executives? Legislators?
Bureaucrats? Chief Executives? Interest Groups?
To
explore these questions the authors review existing theories of
delegation, provide a justification for using statutes as a
basis for examining delegation, and offer their own
theoretical perspective. A chapter
addresses medicaid policy in the state of Michigan, and then
separate chapters are devoted to a comparative analysis of delegation
across state legislatures in the United States and to a comparative
analysis of delegation across parliamentary regimes in Europe. A concluding chapter offers models of
legislative delegation pertinent to separation of powers and
parliamentary regimes respectively.
This
book offers interesting and testable theory and a number of interesting
conclusions. Its most general finding
suggests that legislative delegation is conditioned by regime
type and institutional environment. Legislative
scholars will find much here to guide future research. As importantly, the authors offer a
model of comparative legislative research that we may hope
will be emulated in the future.
Ronald M. Peters, Jr.
Regents Professor of
Political Science
University of Oklahoma
The European Parliament and
Supranational Party System: A Study in Institutional
Development, Amie Kreppel, Cabridge
University Press, 2002. ISBN
0521806259, $60.00, cloth, 280 pages.
Kreppel presents a
thorough treatment of the origins and development of the
European Parliament's supranational party system. Using
both the micro and macro models of congressional development,
she works to formulate a general theory of institutional
development within the European Parliament. She
finds that "the overall pattern of internal E.P. development
has been movement away from egalitarian internal structure and strongly
ideological coalitions toward increased internal centralization of
power and ideological moderation" (2002:10). Additionally,
Kreppel finds that the party system changes, moving from an
ideologically distinct spectrum of parties toward a semblance
of a bipartisan cooperative system.
This
work is an important contribution to the literature on comparative
legislatures. The book is divided into nine chapters and
provides an index and appendices. The
appendices include tables concerning the rules of procedure
and the rules reforms, as well as the ideological spectrum of the party
groups over time. The introductory chapter
concisely develops her argument and outlines the plan of the
book. In chapter two, Kreppel
traces the theories of legislative development and applies
these to the European Parliament. In the
subsequent two chapters, Kreppel provides an historical
accounting of the party groups and the European Parliament.
In
the following three chapters Kreppel systematically demonstrates how
the European Parliament's internal development, its party
groups, ideology, and rules have been impacted by external
changes in the function of the parliament and internal
movements toward a party system constructed to be more capable
of achieving its primary power goals of policy realization. Drawing from Copeland and Patterson
(1994), Kreppel defines the external "critical moments" as
those changes which are large enough to require internal
reform or result in diminishment. She
demonstrates a definite link between these changes and reforms
in the structure of the parliament. Kreppel
demonstrates that the macro model is inadequate at this point to
explain the changes in internal rules. The
macro model would suggest that all benefits of the changes
would be collective (Polsby 1968), but Kreppel finds that as
the parliament gained more legislative power, the micro model
of congressional development became more relevant. The
changes in the rules tended to increase the power of some
groups over others and favor a more bi-partisan cooperative structure
within the parliament.
Using
the changes in the structure of the European Parliament as the external
critical moments impacting party groups, Kreppel finds that "the change
in coalition patterns was a direct result of the institutional
transformation of the European Parliament from a chamber of
debate to a legislative body" (2002: 151). Interestingly,
the application of the micro model to the party groups would
predict that the internal structure of the party groups would
restrict member behavior and increase the power of party
elite; however, Kreppel finds that this consolidation of power
has been restricted within the party groups themselves. The
increased party control of members primarily manifests itself
within the institutional changes of the E.P. Kreppel
then speculates on the future development of the party groups and
internal development and draws conclusions about the structure
and future development of the European Union and the party
group system.
Amie
Kreppel places the study of the European Union and its parties in its
proper place in the study of legislatures and sets an important
precedent for the future study of international legislative
bodies. This is an important book that
addresses the structure of the world decision-making bodies
and produces generalizable theories of institutional
development to be applied to other legislative bodies and
party systems.
Melody Huckaby
Carl Albert Center
Graduate Fellow
University of Oklahoma
Fair Representation: Meeting the Ideal
of One Man, One Vote, Michel L. Balinski and H.
Peyton Young, Brookings Institution Press, 2001. ISBN
081570111X, $22.95, paper, 195 pages.
This
book seeks to answer the question as to how to divide the seats in a
legislature in a fair way proportional to the population of
the states. The idea of apportionment of
seats is explicitly political in a representative system of
government because it gets at issues of power. The
more seats a state holds, the more power it can yield. Absolutely fair apportionment of
seats is not possible, however, due to the indivisibility of seats. As such, some states will be
necessarily over-represented and others under-represented.
The
central issue becomes how to work with fractions.
What should be done when a state's proportion of seats in the
House is 4.5? Do they get 4 seats
or 5 seats? Balinski and Young
conclude that the method created by Daniel Webster, noted American
statesman, is the fairest in its treatment of small and large states,
is the least biased method, and therefore the best for a federal system. They also make certain
recommendations for apportioning seats in proportional
representation systems.
Balinski
and Young say their work is "an example of mathematical reasoning
applied to a problem of public policy" (ix), and this is an
apt description. Fair
representation, for these authors, is both a mathematic and
political problem. Over 60 pages of the book
(Appendix A) are devoted to a mathematical and analytical discussion of
their "Theory of Apportionment". The book is
simultaneously, moreover, a thorough historical account of the
representation problem of apportionment of legislative seats.
Balinski
and Young's book is useful and interesting for scholars interested in
both the Constitutional history and the early American experience of
what fair representation means in the practical sense of how
to apportion legislative seats.
Aleisha Karjala
Ph.D. student in
political science
University of Oklahoma
Going
Home: Black Representatives and their Constituents, Richard F. Fenno, The
University of Chicago Press, 2003. ISBN
0226241319, $18.00, paper, 304 pages.
Using
his well-honed skills of observation and insight, Richard F. Fenno
provides a fresh look at representation by black members of
Congress in Going Home and discovers
both similarities and differences in the constituent connection. Based on interviews spanning more
than three decades, Going Home examines the
congressional careers and district connections of Louis Stokes
(D-Ohio), Barbara Jordan (D-Texas), Chaka Fattah (D-Penn.) and
Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-Ohio).
Fenno's
access to each of the MCs varies in duration and depth, and he
qualifies his findings as "unusually tentative" in part
because he is a "white researcher immersed, briefly, in the
affairs of black communities" (10). Nonetheless,
the portrait he weaves draws adeptly on personal interviews,
first-hand observation and biographical material, and he credits the
influence of contemporary work on black representatives by
Carol Swain (1993) and David Canon (1999). Fenno steps beyond
the concepts of ÒdescriptiveÓ and
"substantive" representation and describes the web of connections
-- electoral, policy, personal and organizational -- of his subjects.
Fenno
finds some distinctive aspects of the representational connection
between African American members of Congress and their
districts. For example, he professes
surprise at the "high-priority preoccupation with education"
that the four representatives share (258). Fenno notes that
the "educative" function of political representation takes on
a distinctive character for these four members of Congress who
not only stress the importance of educational opportunity to their own
careers but also emphasize education as the key to future progress in
their districts.
Fenno
also suggests that the symbolic and organizational significance of
black representation differs from what he has found among
white representatives. Because of
initial white political resistance to the candidacy of these
MCs, all four congressional members featured in Fenno's study
had to maintain a degree of local political involvement -- from the
design of the districts (Jordan) to the development of
independent party structures (Fattah and Stokes) -- in ways
that are neither expected or required of white representatives
(261).
In
a discipline focused on elections and legislative outcomes, FennoÕs Going
Home reminds readers of the
importance of the "representational process" and suggests that
students of American politics too often under-appreciate its
significance or nuances as an analytical category.
Cindy Simon Rosenthal
Associate Professor of
Political Science
University of Oklahoma
Legislative Politics
in Latin America, Scott Morgenstern and
Benito Nacif, Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN
0521792193, $65.00, cloth, 528 pages.
In
this volume, Morgenstern and Nacif have compiled twelve extensive
studies concerning the power, structure and policy making
existing in four Latin American legislatures. Morgenstern
creates a comparative model of legislative performance and
structure which is utilized by the scholars in this work. Together this model and the research
done by the authors effect an indispensable resource and the
most comprehensive and systematic comparative work concerning
the legislative politics of Latin America.
The
four nations selected for inclusion in this study were Argentina,
Brazil, Chile, and Mexico. Through
the systematic research in each legislature by country
specialists in three areas: the relationship between the
executive and the legislature, the policy making process of
the legislature, and the degree of party discipline and role
of political parties, Morgenstern is able to draw generalizable
conclusions and distinguish important institutional factors
that indicate the role of the legislature in these four
nations. The work of the authors and
Morgenstern and Cox's epilogue clearly establishes that
Morgenstern's model is a useful framework for future studies
in Latin American legislatures.
In
the opening chapter, Morgenstern explains the components of the
legislative model. The model and
book are divided into three sections. In
each of these three sections, a scholar conducts a study of
each nation's legislature. In the
first section, Mustapic, Amorim Neto, Siavelis, and Amparo
Casar demonstrate the executive-legislative balance and relationship in
each of the four target nations. While
each legislature appears to be generally reactive, this
research shows that in each nation the legislatures have a
degree of strength. The exercise
of power, both formal and informal, by these legislatures
demonstrates that they are critical to the democratic governance of
each nation.
In
the second section, Jones, Ames, Carey, Nacif explore the role of
political parties in each nation. They
show that the varying degrees of party loyalty in each
institutional setting has a profound effect on the function,
power and structure of the legislature. In
the third section, Eaton, Samuels, Londegran, and Weldon explore
the policy making functions of each legislature. Using
the budgetary process, they demonstrate that reactive power is
a substantial weapon. The executive budget
exits the legislature a significantly different policy than
that which entered the legislature. In the
concluding section, Morgenstern ties these works together, and
draws conclusions from the chapters. He
reiterates that while these legislatures are generally
reactive in nature, there are many differences. He
argues that it is institutional differentiation that causes
the spectrum of effects observed by the authors (2002: 413). In the epilogue, Morgenstern and Cox
use the findings and conclusions in conjunction with the role
of the president in these countries to better explain the
reactive relationship.
This work is an important addition to the legislative studies literature and an invaluable resource for scholars of Latin American politics. The systematic application of the model created by Morgenstern to other Latin American legislatures and presidential systems worldwide would offer important insight into the institutional factors affecting the power, function, and policy-making ability of legislatures.
Melody Huckaby
Carl Albert Center
Graduate Fellow
University of Oklahoma
Mary Parker Follett: Creating
Democracy, Transforming Management, Joan C. Tonn, Yale
University Press, 2003. ISBN 0300096216, $45.00, cloth, 623
pages.
In
1978 I began to look into the prospect of writing a book on the
speakership of the U.S. House of Representatives. My
first step was a trip to the library where I found, in the old
Dewey Decimal section, a book called The Speaker of the
House by
Mary Parker Follett. The book had been
published at the turn of the century, and I figured that it
would not much inform my interest; but in reading it I was
soon disabused of that expectation. I
can recall saying to myself, "this is a good book." Parker's
take on the speakership said a lot about the office and a lot about the
development of political science as an academic discipline. She was the first student of the
Congress, Woodrow Wilson notwithstanding, to argue for an
explicitly political (what later would be called a "behavioral")
understanding of this important political institution. Her
interpretation of the speakership fundamentally shaped my
impression of it. To take but one example,
scholars have argued for decades about the true nature of Henry Clay's
speakership. Some suggest that he
revolutionized the office by shaping the committee system to
fit his needs; others have suggested that he temporized his
leadership by conforming it to the expectations of his members. I always have had the impression that Henry
Clay was first and foremost a charismatic leader who led by
the force of his personality. I
got that idea from Follett and found it confirmed by other sources. This explanation is mostly
unsatisfying to a political science that seeks nomothetic
explanations, but I still think Follett was right. She,
at least, had one big advantage over us: she actually
interviewed men who knew Clay and had worked with him. Her
use of the personal interview was, by the way, another
important contribution to research methodology.
Two
decades later I stumbled upon Mary Parker Follett again. This
time, it was in the context of our MPA program. I
taught a course called "Classics of Public Administration," grounded in
a book by the same title, in which was included a famous essay by
Follett on approaches to management. I
learned then that she had become a major theorist in
organizational leadership and had been the earliest known
advocate of the "soft" approach to leadership, one that
stressed persons rather than tasks, the fulfillment of human
potential as a means to organizational productivity. Follett
developed this perspective at a time when scientific
management was in its heyday, and while it might not now seem too hard
to offer a benign alternative to Taylorism, Follett was the one who did. Subsequently, I have taught a course
in organizational leadership and I am struck by the extent to
which modern leadership theory traces itself to FollettÕs
insights.
So
for me, Mary Parker Follett brings together two intellectual strands
that have shaped my research and teaching over the past
quarter century. It is with great
pleasure, then, that I welcome the publication of Joan TonnÕs
excellent biography of Follett. This
book is rich in historical detail and well textured in its
interpretation. We learn here much about
Follett's private life of which I, at least, was unaware. We also are given a full picture of
the range of Follett's scholarship and her impact on public
affairs. In this book we see Mary Parker
Follett, and through her, the evolution of American government
and administration during the first half of the twentieth
century. From the speakership of
the House, to the settlement movement, to the origin and evolution
of modern management theory, Follett's life and career provides a path
to the American experience. Her
application of psychological principles to an interpretation
of that experience places her alongside (and chronologically
ahead) of Harold Laswell. Her
revolutionary approach to management is a precursor of Douglas
MacGregor, TQM, and its progeny. And all
of us who labor in the vineyard of congressional studies may
trace our work to her. She was a
truly seminal thinker, richly deserving of a full length biography. And of how many American political
scientists can that be said?
Ronald M. Peters, Jr.
Regents' Professor of
Political Science
University of Oklahoma
Political Consultants in U.S.
Congressional Elections, Stephen K. Medvic, The
Ohio State University Press, 2001. ISBN
0814208738, $49.95, cloth, 224 pages.
In
this work on political consultants, Medvic examines the relationship
between hiring campaign consultants and attracting votes. He raises three primary questions: :what consultants do, the effects of
their activity, and the normative consequences of those
effects" (xi). Medvic's analysis provides
a theoretical framework for understanding the role of political
consultants. His theory of
deliberative priming suggests that campaigns use messages to
develop themes to appeal to targeted voters. In
this way, campaigns prime voters to think about candidates in
certain ways. Consultants help frame these
campaign messages. While the message can
always be misunderstood or misinterpreted by the American
public, it is consultants' job "to be aware of the numerous
potential decodings of any message they create. . . (and to
reduce) the number of aberrant decodings that occur" (63). Medvic further tests this theory through
a sophisticated empirical examination of consultant usage in the early
1990s.
The
primary finding of this analysis is that, independent of candidate
spending levels, consultants do significantly influence
election outcomes. Consequently,
they have become increasingly marketable in contemporary
electoral politics. Those most advantaged by
consultants are those candidates most disadvantaged in their races. Consequently, challengers have much
to gain by hiring political consultants to frame their
campaigns. Changes in party
identification and ideological orientation occurring between
1990 and 1994 explain many of the trends identified by Medvic's work. Democratic incumbents who employed
consultants in 1990 and 1992 could have largely postponed the
inevitable upsets to come in 1994. Consultants
hired by Republicans were also largely responsible for their
gains in open seat races during this period.
Medvic
suggests that the normative implications of his work are unclear. While many feel that the professionalization
of politics through the use of consultants is detrimental to
our democratic system, Medvic suggests that "consultants serve
as intermediaries in a complex of media/cultural/political
practices that often seem to have a life of their own" (156). Whether weakening or substituting for
the party system, shaping or responding to media coverage, creating
cynicism or conforming to it, consultants are part of the contemporary
political scene and deserve much more theoretical and empirical
investigation.
Jocelyn
Jones Evans
Assistant Professor of
Government
University of West Florida
Presidents, Parliaments,
and Policy, edited by Stephan Haggard and
Matthew D. McCubbins, Cambridge University Press, 2001. ISBN
0521773040 (cloth), $70.00, ISBN 0521774853, paper, $25.00),
359 pages.
Employing
a comparative case study method, this edited volume seeks to move
beyond the question of "Do
institutions matter?" Assuming
that this question has been answered adequately in the
affirmative by previous research, the works in this volume begin to
explore how institutions matter. How
do institutions effect policy change?
In
answering this question, Haggard and McCubbins find the traditional
institutional distinction between presidential and
parliamentary systems lacking. In
order to narrow the focus, this volume focuses on differences
among presidential systems, with no case studies of parliamentary
systems. In this way the title is
perhaps misleading, but this in no way detracts from the value
of the book.
Only
four countries (Argentina, Taiwan, Chile, and Poland) are studied here. At first glance, this may seem to be an odd
mix. But the logic behind these
choices is well explained. In
addition, the variables and plan of the book are well laid-out
in the introduction. Haggard and McCubbins
have managed to assemble a collection of works that connect well with
each other and that are consistent with the purpose and model presented
in the introduction.
The
book does prove to be a frustration, in that more questions are raised
than answered. However, this frustration
also makes the book especially useful. By
accepting that institutions do matter, Haggard and McCubbins
have opened a new arena of research. The
work brings forth a wealth of areas for future research, most
obviously a similar study of parliamentary systems.
Courtney Cullison
Carl Albert Center
Graduate Fellow
University of Oklahoma
Scandal Proof: Do Ethics Laws Make Government
Ethical? G. Calvin Mackenzie with
Michael Hafken, Brookings Institution Press, 2002. ISBN 00815754035, $16.95, paper, 196
pages.
The idea that our public
servants should act in an ethical and responsible manner is
not a very controversial idea. The
methods used to achieve that end, however, have had debatable
success, as G. Calvin Mackenzie explains in his work Scandal
Proof: Do Ethics Laws Make Government Ethical? His book is both a brief
introduction to scandal and corruption in American history and
an analysis of the ethics laws and regulations directed at
executive branch employees.
The beginning of
MackenzieÕs book is devoted to explaining the historical
perspective on corruption in American government. He
explains that while corruption has always existed, the scope
and level of corruption has changed in ways that will make
historical comparisons difficult. The
first difficulty is that statistics on corruption are difficult
to obtain, because it is only after major scandals that legislation is
introduced to counter the problem, and most corruption has gone
unpunished. Moreover, what
constitutes true corruption has evolved over time. The
idea of Òhonest graftÓ has now gone the way of Tammany Hall,
and can no longer claim a place in honest politics. Finally,
Mackenzie acknowledges that corruption in the federal government, the
focus of his study, is a more recent development, owing to the
increasing interaction between the government and corporate
America of the late nineteenth century as well as the
expansion of the federal bureaucracy that occurred in the wake
of the New Deal.
After his introduction to
corruption in America, Mackenzie then details the modern
attempts to eliminate it. Beginning
with President Kennedy, he examines the practice of enforcing
high standards of ethical behavior on executive branch employees
through executive orders. These
rules were finally supplemented by the comprehensive Ethics in
Government Act of 1978. Passed in
the shadow of Watergate and signed by President Carter, this act was an
attempt to set up enforceable rules that would take the discretion out
of ethics. The idea was that black and
white rules would deter unethical activity.
Mackenzie is skeptical
about the effectiveness of these rules when viewed against
their costs, which he examines in detail. He
acknowledges that there has been a steady increase in legal
investigations and convictions of corruption in office, what
he considers one of the better measures of corruption in
office, but he does not see a vast improvement in the character
of our public employees. Instead, he
examines the plethora of paperwork, which can take up to four
months to fill out, that is required of some positions. He
is not only worried that this, along with the strenuous public
financial disclosure required of higher officials, deters those who
would make excellent public servants. He
is also unconvinced that the benefit of these programs
outweighs their financial costs.
"The costs are too great, the benefits too scare to sustain the current
ethics policies" (159). Whether or not one agrees with Mackenzie's
conclusion, the detailed research presented in his book is
above par. Presenting both an introduction to ethical problems
in American political history as well as an in-depth analysis
of recent attempts to enforce ethical behavior on governmental
employees, his work presents a well-rounded picture. It
is both a policy case study and an historical analysis of ethics in
govenment. This book would be an excellent supplement to any class on
American politics.
Travis Chapman
Undergraduate student in
political science
University of Oklahoma
Shades of Gray: Perspectives on Campaign
Ethics, Candice J. Nelson, David
A. Dulio, Stephen K. Medvic, Brookings Institution Press, 2002. ISBN 0815706170, $18.95, paper, 262 pages.
For
some, there is nothing funnier in politics than the phrase "campaign
ethics." All laughter aside, Shades
of Gray: Perspectives on Campaign Ethics, edited by Candice
Nelson, David Dulio, and Stephen Medvic, addresses critical
questions concerning ethics in campaigns from the perspective
of actors who play critical roles in today's elections --
candidates, political consultants, parties, interest groups,
the media, and citizens. The release of a
book addressing campaign ethics could not be better timed, as
public perceptions of campaigns are increasingly negative,
political spot ads are progressively growing more controversial,
and the media's "horse race" treatment are promoting a paparazzi-like
atmosphere. Shades of Gray contains fourteen
chapters that attempt to outline, understand, assess, and
critique the ethical challenges, roles, and responsibilities
of candidates, political consultants, parties, interest
groups, the media, and citizens. Each
actor is discussed in two chapters: one written by a scholar
and one by a practitioner. While
both the scholars and practitioners talk about the role of actors in
fostering ethical campaigns and their success in fulfilling
ethical roles, the chapters diverge in one crucial manner. The scholars accentuate
relationships, i.e. how well other actors influence each other. Yet, the practitioners give more
emphasis to providing solutions for how each actor can do a
better job nurturing campaign ethics. For
example, Robin Kolodny, an academic, highlights the relationships
that political parties have with various other actors and how these
relationships compromise the parties' ability to act as
ethical agents; however, she concludes that the parties' goal
of, and method for, winning elections is not unethical. It is the system they operate within
that is unethical. In contrast, Mark
Siegel, former executive director of the DNC, centers his discussion on
how both parties have intentionally circumvented the spirit of
electoral laws and how certain types of ethics training could
increase participation and restore faith in democracy.
One
of the stronger, interesting, and more important chapters of this book
is the second chapter, "Civic Responsibility or Self-Interest?" Dale Miller and Stephen Medvic distinguish
what the term ethics means to philosophers --
how we are to lead our lives, morality- versus everyday people
-- the rules and standards that are use to judge an
individuals' actions. This is important
for two reasons: one, it clarifies to the reader what exactly
is meant by campaign ethics; two, it allows the
authors to provide a framework for evaluating campaign
activity. Two schools of thought buttress
the framework. On one side is the
"self-interest" perspective, where individuals and groups look
for their own self-interest before serving the public interest. Adherents to this thought believe
that the common good is best served when people protect their
own interest. In contrast is the "civic
responsibility" perspective, which argues that the public
interest should be served before individual interests and only
by serving the public interest can individuals be truly
protected. By specifying the framework,
the editors made it easier to understand the varying
approaches and conclusions found in Shades of Gray.
In
conclusion, the strength of this book is in the assortment of
approaches and conclusions about the role of ethics by the
central actors in campaigns. Although
some may be disappointed by the lack of consensus by the
authors or the lack of association between the articles, the book does
an excellent job of precipitating a larger discussion regarding the
role of ethics in politics -- something all of us, scholars
and candidates alike, do not do enough.
Josh Stockley
Ph.D. candidate in
political science
University of Oklahoma
Stalemate:
Causes & Consequences of Legislative Gridlock, Sarah A. Binder,
Brookings Institution Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8157-0911-0, $16.95,
paper, 202 pages.
In
her study of legislative productivity, Binder embarks on what is
essentially an exploration of the recent trends in legislative
performance. Specifically, Binder
is concerned with the questions surrounding legislative
stalemate -- frequency, causes, consequences, lasting effects
on the institution. In an era when divided
government (and presumably stalemate) are the norm, the more
important question may be how does anything get done at all?
Binder
begins her study by challenging the traditional notion that the framers
desired legislative stalemate and designed a system that would ensure
gridlock. However, Binder contends that stalemate is an unintended
consequence of the constitutional design -- one which could be
rectified in the present without compromising the vision of
the framers. The prime objective of the
framers design was to insulate the judiciary and the
legislature from executive manipulation. The legislative
process, or even the electoral process, could be reformed without
opening up the judiciary and legislature to undue executive
influence.
Binder's
work rests on three primary findings. First,
divided government is one cause of legislative stalemate, but it is not
the only cause. "Unified gridlock" is also
a significant problem. Second, the
polarization of political parties in the American system
increases the frequency of gridlock. This
is due to the lack of middle ground (or room for compromise)
that is found with highly polarized congressional parties. And third, conflict between the House
and the Senate effect the likelihood of policy change. By
treating Congress as a unicameral body, previous studies have
missed this important dimension of the legislative gridlock.
Binder
closes her work with a discussion of the consequences of legislative
gridlock, including the electoral and institutional impacts,
as well as a section exploring the larger dilemma surrounding
stalemate. Binder concludes that some
minor institutional reforms are in order, but legislators have
little electoral incentive to enact such reforms.
Courtney Cullison
Carl Albert Center
Graduate Fellow
University of Oklahoma
Voting with Dollars: A New Paradigm for
Campaign Finance, Bruce Ackerman and Ian
Ayres, Yale University Press, 2002. ISBN
0300092628, $29.95, cloth, 304 pages.
Ackerman
and Ayres present a unique solution to the problem of campaign finance
reform. Instead of working under the
traditional paradigms of campaign finance reform as typified
by the debates over the McCain-Feingold bill, they step back
to take a look at the problem with different assumptions. While they still acknowledge that Buckley
v. Valeo,
the landmark case that established many of the rules
constraining campaign finance reform today, still has merits,
they reevaluate how to approach these constraints. The
book proposes a virtually fully formed new system for financing
campaigns.
The "patriot" funding
system formulated in the text posits that each citizen will
vote with dollars, specifically 50 "patriot" dollars,
allocated to them from public funds each election cycle. Citizens may give more than their 50
"patriot" dollars, but anything above the equal allocation comes out of
their own pocketbooks. The key to this
system is secrecy and the authors fill most of the chapters
explaining and defending this concept. Essentially
the "patriot" dollars system would function like the secret
ballot. Just as each citizen receives one
vote that is cast in secret, each citizen's "patriot" dollars
would be allocated in secret. The
goal is to eliminate the system of money for influence that
many believe corrupts the current political system. The
logic is that if candidates are not able to ascertain how much
donors gave to them, then they cannot be certain that they should allow
donors the appropriate influence over public policy. In
the end the authors believe that such a system will encourage
candidates to aggressively seek out a wider range of voters and donors.
The authors address some of the potential problems with the patriot system including fractionalization of political parties, attempts to circumvent the secrecy aspect, incumbency advantages and so on. The constant, driving principle is that even with some potential problems, the voting with "patriot" dollars system will better address the financing of political campaigns in a democratic manner than the current thinking about campaign finance reform. One of the more potent aspects of the book is that while they address quite a lot of theoretical concerns, the authors also present a practical system with practical recommendations. This book would be an appropriate text for advanced courses on campaigns and American politics. The ideas presented in the book should make for lively discussions and debates in any classroom setting.
Chris Grossman
Ph.D. candidate in
political science
University of Oklahoma
Why Americans Split
Their Tickets: Campaigns, Competition, and Divided Government, Barry C. Burden and David
C. Kimball, The University of Michigan Press, 2002. ISBN 0472112864, $52.50, cloth, 205
pages.
In
the last thirty years, there has been an increased frequency of divided
government in the United States. Because the incidence of divided
government has numerous consequences on the political system,
it has become extremely important to understand the reasons
for this phenomenon. In Why Americans Split Their Tickets:
Campaigns, Competition, and Divided Government, Barry Burden and David
Kimball explore the causes of divided government by examining
the reasons behind split-ticket voting.
Using
new quantitative techniques in their study, Burden and Kimball find
that the dominant explanations of split-ticket voting are
faulty. Contrary to popular belief, divided government is not
a result of strategic balancing by voters who prefer divided
government to one-party control. Similarly, the authors also
argue that divided government should not be interpreted as a
mandate for compromise between the parties' extremist positions.
Rather, the authors argue that the absence of competition in
congressional races is a major source of ticket splitting in
the United States. Supporting their conclusions is a very
strong association between ticket splitting and incumbency,
campaign spending, and candidate name recognition -- all
indicators of candidate quality in congressional elections.
In addition to their major findings on the causes of
divided government and ticket splitting, Burden and Kimball
also note that split-ticket voting has declined in the past
ten years. However, this finding is not a result of increased
competition in congressional races. Instead, the authors argue
that the decline in ticket splitting in recent years is
related to the sharpening policy differences between the political
parties which make it much less likely for voters to split
their tickets.
InWhy
Americans Split Their Tickets, Burden and Kimball
contribute a great deal to the discussion over the causes of
divided government. Not only do they debunk the popular
explanations of ticket splitting, but they also offer an
alternative explanation for the reasons behind split-ticket
voting. Because of these findings, this book makes a strong
contribution to the research on divided government.
Carrie Palmer Sparling
Ph.D. candidate in
political science
University of Oklahoma