“…As a consequence, votes in Congress frequently saw two bipartisan coalitions voting against each other. It is generally accepted, however, that since the early 1970s partisan polarization has been steadily increasing at the level of party elites and within Congress Hetherington, 2001Hetherington, , 2009Jacobson, 2010;Layman et al, 2006;Levendusky, 2009;McCarty et al, 2006;Poole and Rosenthal, 1984;Sinclair, 2006;Stonecash et al, 2002;Theriault, 2008;Voteview.com, 2012Voteview.com, , 2014. 1 Analysis of DW NOMINATE scores up to the end of the first session of the 113th Congress, for example, demonstrates that the ideological gap between the parties is now greater than at any point since Reconstruction (Voteview.com, 2014).…”