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Replication Data for: Presidential Cues and the Nationalization of Congressional Rhetoric, 1973-2016

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DataCite Commons2025-05-11 更新2025-05-17 收录
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https://dataverse.harvard.edu/citation?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/TJAISA
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Presidents occupy a unique role as both the head of the executive branch and a de-facto party leader. They nationalize politics and polarize lawmaking. Members of Congress know this, and they leverage the president's symbolic power to heighten political conflict. I argue that lawmakers, particularly those in the non-presidential party, invoke the president to nationalize legislative debate and polarize constituent opinion. Using the text of House and Senate floor speeches between 1973-2016 and a within-member panel design, I find that legislators reference the president more frequently in the out-party, and increasingly so as a district's media environment becomes more nationalized. Presidential references are also moderated by constituency partisanship. I support the behavioral implications with a vignette experiment: when a Republican Senator invokes President Biden in a policy speech, Republican respondents increase approval of that Senator and oppose political compromise. This research highlights the institutional consequences of nationalization and negative partisanship.
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Harvard Dataverse
创建时间:
2023-04-06
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