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Executive coalition building

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 October 2023

Nicholas G. Napolio*
Affiliation:
University of California, Riverside, CA, USA
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Abstract

Why do executive agencies form coalitions? Legislative coalitions are widely theorized and studied, but less attention has been paid to executive coalitions. Executive agencies’ dependence on the political branches calls for a distinctive theory of coalition building. This article presents such a theory, arguing that agencies form coalitions to optimize their autonomy given their subordinate position in a separation of powers system by signaling to overseers that their policies are efficient and should be maintained. Bureaucrats form coalitions actively to advance their policy goals in the face of political opposition. Using data on dozens of agencies over seventeen years, I find that agencies are most likely to form coalitions when their preferences are misaligned with the president but aligned with each other. I also find evidence that coalitions send credible signals that bureaucratic policies are efficient since Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs is less likely to request regulatory revisions of policies produced by coalitions.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press
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Table 1. Coalition formation by presidential term

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Figure 1. Coalition Formation by Agency Type Combination, 1997–2012. Probability calculated as the proportion of dyad-years of each combination that formed a coalition. Eighteen percent of observations are Cabinet-Cabinet, 51% are Cabinet-Independent, and 31% are Independent-Independent.

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Table 2. Most and least central agencies

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Figure 2. Probability of Coalition Formation by Number of Overlapping Laws. Points represent dyads. Curves and ribbons estimated with bivariate logistic regression.

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Table 3. Cross-tabulation of probability of coalition formation

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Table 4. Executive coalition building

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Figure 3. Marginal Effect of Agency Alignment. The rug on the x-axis displays the density of presidential misalignment. Marginal effects estimated from model 4 in Table 4. The left y-axis plots the change in the predicted probability of coalition formation given a unit increase in agency alignment at the value of presidential misalignment on the x-axis, and the right y-axis displays the change in probability of coalition formation given a standard within-dyad change in agency alignment at the value of presidential misalignment on the x-axis. The white point indicates the marginal effect of agency alignment when presidential misalignment is one standard deviation above the mean, and the horizontal line connects the point to the two y-axes to ease interpretation.

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Table 5. OIRA less likely to request regulatory changes from coalitions

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Table 6. Presidential misalignment and OIRA review of coalitions

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Figure 4. Relationship between Presidential Misalignment and OIRA Review of Coalitions. Ribbon represents 95% confidence interval of simulations. Rug along x-axis displays the density of presidential misalignment.

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Napolio Dataset

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