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First published on February 29, 2008
Political Research Quarterly 2008, doi:10.1177/1065912907309156
© 2008 University of Utah

Article

Institutional Change and the Electoral Connection in the Senate: Revisiting the Effects of Direct Election

Scott R. Meinke*

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: smeinke{at}bucknell.edu.


   Abstract
The author argues that direct election intensified existing electoral incentives in the early-twentieth-century Senate, shifting the audience for senators’ reelection efforts with measurable behavioral consequences. The author examines patterns of bill sponsorship, roll-call participation, and party voting in the decades surrounding the Seventeenth Amendment’s ratification, a time when originally elected and originally selected senators served side by side. The author finds evidence of increased sponsorship and participation among originally elected senators. Comparing behavioral patterns before and after the constitutional amendment also reveals other important behavioral shifts toward a mass audience in the post-amendment period, including a tendency to increase constituency bill sponsorship immediately before reelection and a strengthening of the link between state partisanship and senators’ party support voting.


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