Quarterly Journal of Political Science > Vol 19 > Issue 2

How Does Party Discipline Affect Legislative Behavior? Evidence from Within-Term Variation in Lame-Duck Status

Jon H. Fiva, Department of Economics, BI Norwegian Business School, Norway, jon.h.fiva@bi.no , Oda Nedregård, Department of Economics, BI Norwegian Business School, Norway, oda.nedregard@bi.no
 
Suggested Citation
Jon H. Fiva and Oda Nedregård (2024), "How Does Party Discipline Affect Legislative Behavior? Evidence from Within-Term Variation in Lame-Duck Status", Quarterly Journal of Political Science: Vol. 19: No. 2, pp 191-216. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/100.00022094

Publication Date: 10 Apr 2024
© 2024 J. H. Fiva and O. Nedregård
 
Subjects
Electoral institutions,  Parliamentary politics,  Representation
 
Keywords
Political partiesparty disciplineroll-call voteslegislative speech
 

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In this article:
Empirical Case: Norway 1993–2021 
Research Design and Outcome Variables 
Results 
Conclusion 
References 

Abstract

How important are political parties in motivating and disciplining elected officials? Using a difference-in-differences design, we study how shocks to incumbents’ reelection probabilities affect legislative behavior in a setting where parties fully control candidate selection. We find that within-term variation in lame-duck status has a strong negative effect on legislative effort. There is, however, no clear evidence that lame-duck status affects the extent to which legislators deviate from the party line. Our findings align well with the citizen–candidate framework, where candidates have fixed ideological positions that do not vary based on electoral incentives.

DOI:10.1561/100.00022094