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    Replication Data for: Income Inequality and State Parties: Who Gets...

    • datasearch.gesis.org
    • dataverse-staging.rdmc.unc.edu
    Updated Feb 22, 2020
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    Wright, Gerald; Rigby, Elizabeth (2020). Replication Data for: Income Inequality and State Parties: Who Gets Represented? [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.15139/S3/XJZONF
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 22, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Odum Institute Dataverse Network
    Authors
    Wright, Gerald; Rigby, Elizabeth
    Description

    Recent studies of representation at the national and state levels have provided evidence that elected officials’ votes, political parties’ platforms, and enacted policy choices are more responsive to the preferences of the affluent, while those with average incomes and the poor have little or no impact in the political process. Yet, this research on the dominance of the affluent has overlooked key partisan differences in the electorate. In this era of hyper-partisanship, we argue that representation occurs through the party system, and we test whether taking this reality into account changes the story of policy dominance by the rich. We combine data on public preferences and state party positions to test for income bias in parties’ representation of their own co-partisans. The results show an interesting pattern in which under-representation of the poor is driven by Democratic parties pushing the more liberal social policy stances of rich Democrats and Republican parties reflecting the particularly conservative economic policy preferences of Rich Republicans. Thus, we have ample evidence that the wealthy, more often than not, do call the shots, but that the degree to which this disproportionate party responsiveness produces less representative policies depends on the party in power and the policy dimension being considered. We conclude by linking this pattern of influence and “coincidental representation” to familiar changes which define the transformation of the New Deal party system.[insert article abstract]

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Share
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TwitterTwitter
Email
Click to copy link
Link copied
Close
Cite
Wright, Gerald; Rigby, Elizabeth (2020). Replication Data for: Income Inequality and State Parties: Who Gets Represented? [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.15139/S3/XJZONF

Replication Data for: Income Inequality and State Parties: Who Gets Represented?

Related Article
Explore at:
Dataset updated
Feb 22, 2020
Dataset provided by
Odum Institute Dataverse Network
Authors
Wright, Gerald; Rigby, Elizabeth
Description

Recent studies of representation at the national and state levels have provided evidence that elected officials’ votes, political parties’ platforms, and enacted policy choices are more responsive to the preferences of the affluent, while those with average incomes and the poor have little or no impact in the political process. Yet, this research on the dominance of the affluent has overlooked key partisan differences in the electorate. In this era of hyper-partisanship, we argue that representation occurs through the party system, and we test whether taking this reality into account changes the story of policy dominance by the rich. We combine data on public preferences and state party positions to test for income bias in parties’ representation of their own co-partisans. The results show an interesting pattern in which under-representation of the poor is driven by Democratic parties pushing the more liberal social policy stances of rich Democrats and Republican parties reflecting the particularly conservative economic policy preferences of Rich Republicans. Thus, we have ample evidence that the wealthy, more often than not, do call the shots, but that the degree to which this disproportionate party responsiveness produces less representative policies depends on the party in power and the policy dimension being considered. We conclude by linking this pattern of influence and “coincidental representation” to familiar changes which define the transformation of the New Deal party system.[insert article abstract]

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