Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy > Vol 5 > Issue 3

A Theory of Intra-Party Factions and Electoral Accountability

Michael Pomirchy, Stanford University, USA, mpomirchy@gmail.com
 
Suggested Citation
Michael Pomirchy (2024), "A Theory of Intra-Party Factions and Electoral Accountability", Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy: Vol. 5: No. 3, pp 387-413. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/113.00000106

Publication Date: 27 Nov 2024
© 2024 M. Pomirchy
 
Subjects
Congress,  Elections,  Formal modelling,  Political parties
 
Keywords
factionsCongressaccountabilitypolitical institutionsformal modeling
 

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In this article:
Contributions to Literature 
Model 
Note on Assumptions 
Analysis 
Case Studies 
Conclusion 
References 

Abstract

Intra-party factions have increasingly wielded influence on key agenda items in the U.S. Congress. To better understand the welfare implications of these groups, this paper presents a formal model in which incumbents choose to join a faction and cast a vote on the majority party’s agenda, after which an election takes place. This theory shows that while factions may enable incumbents to vote against the party’s agenda, factions can have positive effects on party welfare by signaling incumbents’ ideological type to their districts, thereby improving incumbents’ reelection prospects and increasing the number of seats held by the party. I present case studies on the House Freedom Caucus’s opposition to a funding measure for the DHS and the Blue Dog Democrats’ defections on cap-and-trade to illustrate the theory.

DOI:10.1561/113.00000106

Online Appendix | 113.00000106_app.pdf

This is the article's accompanying appendix.

DOI: 10.1561/113.00000106_app