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Redistributing Values in Congress: Interest Group Influence Under Sub-Optimal Conditions

Donald P Haider-Markel

University Of Kansas

Empirical studies on the ability of interest groups to influence legislative voting behavior are mixed. Most legislative researchers, however, have avoided studying culture war issues, such as abortion, school prayer, or homosexuality These issues often exhibit extreme levels of conflict and low levels of public and/or legislative support, precisely those conditions under which interest group influence should be weak. My research fills this gap by examining the influence of lesbian and gay interest groups on legislative voting behavior from the 95th to 104th Congresses. I use an exchange theory of interest group/legislator relationships to construct empirical models of House and Senate voting on lesbian and gay issues. I hypothesize that legislative voting is driven by partisanship, ideology, religious beliefs, and constituency opinion, with interest group influence occurring at the margins. The results of multiple regression analysis suggest that interest groups may be able to influence legislative voting behavior even when conditions are sub-optimal. I suggest that interest group influence on culture war issues is conditional, but may be more visible simply because support has been relatively low.

Political Research Quarterly, Vol. 52, No. 1, 113-144 (1999)
DOI: 10.1177/106591299905200105


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K. Lindaman and D. P. Haider-Markel
Issue Evolution, Political Parties, and the Culture Wars
Political Research Quarterly, March 1, 2002; 55(1): 91 - 110.
[Abstract] [PDF]