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Goal Salience and the 2006 Race for House Majority LeaderCatholic University of America, Washington, D.C.
Loyola College in Maryland, Baltimore In intraparty congressional leadership races, the characteristics of candidates and the nature of their campaigns increase the salience of particular legislator goals and, in doing so, influence legislators' support of particular leadership candidates. Using multinomial logit regression analysis, the authors test this "goal salience" theory to determine what factors predict individual legislators' commitments to candidates in the 2006 House Republican majority leader's race. Notably, among other factors, the level of campaign donations made to Republican House members had a positive and statistically significant relationship with the choice of specific candidates.
Key Words: U.S. Congress U.S. House of Representatives congressional leadership leadership elections party leadership Republican Party leadership PAC
This version was published on December
1, 2007 Political Research Quarterly, Vol. 60, No. 4,
618-630 (2007) |
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