Are loyal majority party members more successful politicians?

.

Photo credit

Majority Party leaders are hypothesized, through their control of the legislative schedule in the House of Representatives, to use legislative success as a selective incentive to encourage majority party members to contribute to the collective goals of the party. Members can demonstrate party loyalty through floor voting and financial contributions to the party’s re-election efforts. This article examines legislative success from the 103rd through 107th Congresses. The evidence shows that both demonstrations of party loyalty have a significant effect on legislative success.

Source: “Party Loyalty and Legislative Success, Are Loyal Majority Party Members More Successful in the U.S. House of Representatives?” from Political Research Quarterly

If you want to read the best humorist from any political wing, check out P.J. O’Rourke.

You should follow me on Facebook here. I’ve started posting extra content on that page. Don’t miss out; go here and hit the “Like” button.

You can also subscribe via Twitter, email, or RSS. Check out the site’s most popular posts of all time.

Related Posts:

Are conservative politicians better looking than liberals?

Are the stereotypes about liberals and conservatives true?

Among politicians, are Republicans or Democrats more likely to adopt Twitter?

Can you tell if someone is a Republican or Democrat just by looking at their face?

Are you left wing — or do you just think you are?

Why politics is a mess and it’s all your fault

How can you easily get more people to vote?

Does college football affect who gets elected President of the United States? How about the Final Four?

Why do politicians rarely change their positions?

Why do political incumbents have an advantage?

You know why that country’s citizens are miserable? Too many colors in their flag.

When it comes to politics, this is how shallow we are

Do liberals and conservatives dream differently?

How do our political leanings affect our investing?

Does America thrive because the poor don’t vote?

How to tell which countries are corrupt… by looking at traffic tickets

Is corruption widespread in Congress?

Is corruption the problem or just the wrong *kind* of corruption?

Is there *too little* money in politics?

Share

Subscribe to the newsletter