Paying for the Party
How Fundraising Demands Lead to Less Productive and Less Representative Legislatures
Paying for the Party
How Fundraising Demands Lead to Less Productive and Less Representative Legislatures
A revealing, data-rich exploration of how American legislators transformed from active policymakers into party fundraisers.
Lawmakers in Congress and state legislatures across the United States spend enormous amounts of time and effort fundraising, not just for their own seats but for the party. Whether dialing for dollars or hosting high-priced fundraising events, the pursuit of campaign funds is now a massive part of the American legislator’s job description. What explains this transformation, and what are the consequences for public policy?
In Paying for the Party, Michael Kistner uses new theory and new data to answer these questions. He shows that state legislative party organizations—Democratic and Republican caucuses in capitols across the country—are responsible for turning their members into single-minded seekers of money. Parties reward legislators who contribute the most with powerful leadership and committee positions. Consequently, the members who now hold these agenda-setting positions are increasingly neither the most productive nor knowledgeable lawmakers, but rather those who can raise the most money. And when legislators are asked to raise more money, they skip committee hearings for fundraising events, enacting fewer substantive policies as a result. Paying for the Party shows that parties in contemporary American legislatures have hollowed out the policymaking capacity of their institutions and empowered a decidedly non-representative set of legislators.
208 pages | 24 halftones, 4 line drawings, 11 tables | 6 x 9
Chicago Studies in American Politics
Political Science: American Government and Politics
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: The New Money Race
Part I: Explaining Party Fundraising
2. A Theory of Party Fundraising
3. Party Fundraising in the States
4. Who Gives, and Why?
Part II: The Consequences of Party Fundraising
5. A Theory of Fundraising and Policymaking
6. Fundraising Demands and Policy Productivity
7. Fundraising Demands and Descriptive Representation
Part III: Conclusion
8. The Future of Party Fundraising
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Be the first to know
Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!