“…2 The comparative politics literature on intermediaries, in turn, is focused almost exclusively on political brokers embedded in electoral networks (Stokes et al, 2013; Kitschelt & Wilkinson, 2007), and so has relatively little to say about the role of brokers in social accountability. Recent literature on political intermediaries moves beyond the narrow conception of a “party broker” tied to single partisan machine (Holland & Palmer-Rubin, 2015), and relaxes the notion of a strict quid pro quo while also extending beyond elections (Auerbach et al, 2021; Nichter, 2018). The intermediation in these studies, however, is still firmly “political” in the classic sense that brokers serve as “gatekeepers” between citizen-voters and politician-agents (“acting as go-betweens between the flow of goods and services and the flow of support and votes,” Auyero, 2000, p. 67).…”