2000
DOI: 10.1111/0022-3816.00001
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The Republican Revolution and the House Appropriations Committee

Abstract: This study applies the theory of "conditional party government" to the interaction between the Republican party and the Appropriations Committee in the 104th House, seen in the context of developments since the 96th Congress. As expected by the theory, we find that the relatively homogenous preferences of the Republican contingent in the House led them to adopt new institutional arrangements to enhance the powers of their leaders, which in turn were used to advance the party's policy goals. Given that the lead… Show more

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Cited by 201 publications
(103 citation statements)
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“…This seems to fly in the face of received wisdom about the partisan House and indicates that some caution in accepting the results may be in order. It might, however, be consistent with the centralization of power in the hands of Republican leaders (Aldrich and Rohde 2000). 37 This would have led all but a select few legislators to believe that their legislative efforts were almost certain to fail (thus eliminating the differences in positive proposal power between observed agenda positions).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This seems to fly in the face of received wisdom about the partisan House and indicates that some caution in accepting the results may be in order. It might, however, be consistent with the centralization of power in the hands of Republican leaders (Aldrich and Rohde 2000). 37 This would have led all but a select few legislators to believe that their legislative efforts were almost certain to fail (thus eliminating the differences in positive proposal power between observed agenda positions).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To the extent that party and ideology are correlated, our ideological distance measures will control for some effects of partisanship on budgetary outcomes and delay. But parties are more than a collection of individuals with shared ideological interests (Aldrich and Rohde 2000). Scholars also see congressional parties as organizations that work to promote a collective brand name (Cox and McCubbins 2005).…”
Section: Control Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of particular interest to us, previous studies either (1) apply theoretical models that assume legislators respond to Court decisions based on their preferences over them (e.g., Gely and Spiller 1990;Segal 1997) or (2) explicitly hypothesize that ideological disagreement with Court decisions causes Congress to pass legislation overriding them (Eskridge 1991a(Eskridge , 1991bHettinger and Zorn 2005;Ignagni, Meernik, and King 1998;Staudt, Lindstadt, and O'Connor 2007). This perspective seems reasonable in light of the centrality of policy preferences in contemporary explanations of congressional decisionmaking (Aldrich and Rohde 2000;McCubbins 2005, 2007;Krehbiel 1991Krehbiel , 1998. Indeed, the congressional literature offers convincing empirical evidence that ideology plays a key role in explaining Members' votes on bills and the passage of legislation (e.g., Poole and Rosenthal 2007).…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…First, the chamber median model (Krehbiel 1991(Krehbiel , 1998 contends that the medians of the respective chambers determine the LP and RP actors. Second, the party gatekeeping model (Aldrich and Rohde 2000;McCubbins 2005, 2007) argues that the pivotal actors are the left-most and right-most players among the majority party medians, chamber medians, and the president. As with the party gatekeeping model, the veto filibuster model emphasizes the importance of political parties; and in contrast to the former model, it takes into recognition the possibility of a Senate filibuster and a possible override of a president's veto.…”
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confidence: 99%