Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Binder explores the causes of legislative gridlock. Whereas previous scholars have concentrated primarily on divided party control between Congress and the president, Binder suggests that the distribution of policy preferences within Congress may play a more central role in causing gridlock. She finds that intrabranch party polarization and greater preference heterogeneity across the membership, as well as preference divergence between the chambers, lead to periods of decreased legislative productivity.
Although “gridlock” is said to have entered the political lexicon after the 1980 elections, stalemate is not a modern legislative invention. Indeed, in the very first Federalist, Alexander Hamilton complained about the “unequivocal experience of the inefficacy of the subsisting federal government” under the Articles of Confederation. Although stalemate may be endemic to American politics, no definitive account of its proportions or causes yet exists. In this article, I survey recent work, propose a new measure of gridlock, and test several alternative accounts of variation in gridlock over the last half-century.
There is no shortage of scholarship on the politics of gridlock. Most prominent is the work of Mayhew, who rejects the conventional wisdom that divided party control of Congress and the presidency dampens the legislative output of government. Subsequent work takes Mayhew as the point of departure, revisiting the questions he raised and researched. This project returns as well to Mayhew's work, probing in a new fashion the contours of gridlock in American national politics.
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