TY - BOOK
AU - Jones,David R.
AU - McDermott,Monika L.
TI - Americans, Congress, and democratic responsiveness: public evaluations of Congress and electoral consequences
SN - 9780472022137
AV - JK1041 .J66 2010eb
U1 - 328.73 22
PY - 2010///
CY - Ann Arbor
PB - University of Michigan Press
KW - United States
KW - Congress
KW - Public opinion
KW - Elections
KW - fast
KW - USA
KW - gnd
KW - Voting
KW - Vote
KW - États-Unis
KW - Opinion publique
KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE
KW - bisac
KW - American Government / General
KW - Government
KW - Legislative Branch
KW - bisacsh
KW - American Government
KW - Öffentliche Meinung
KW - Government - U.S
KW - hilcc
KW - Law, Politics & Government
KW - Political Institutions & Public Administration - U.S., Legislative Branch
KW - Electronic books
N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 203-216) and index; Responding to Congressional policy -- Failing pop quizzes but passing the test -- Evaluating Congress ideologically -- Voting the bums out -- Riding the electoral wave -- Responding to public evaluations
N2 - Annotation;
"Jones and McDermott restore meaning to democratic responsibility by finding that public evaluations affect Congress. In contrast to the popular depiction of the representatives controlling the represented
rampant in the political science literature, Jones and McDermott show that the people are in control, determining not only the direction of policy in Congress, but also who stays, who retires, and who faces difficult reelection efforts. This book makes an important correction to our understanding of how Congress operates."
--Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas at Austin
Voters may not know the details of specific policies, but they have a general sense of how well Congress serves their own interests; and astute politicians pay attention to public approval ratings. When the majority party is unpopular, as during the 2008 election, both voters and politicians take a hand in reconfiguring the House and the Senate. Voters throw hard-line party members out of office while candidates who continue to run under the party banner distance themselves from party ideology. In this way, public approval directly affects policy shifts as well as turnovers at election time. Contrary to the common view of Congress as an insulated institution, Jones and McDermott argue that Congress is indeed responsive to the people of the United States.
David R. Jones is Professor of Political Science at Baruch College, City University of New York.
Monika L. McDermott is Associate Professor of Political Science at Fordham University.
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