Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy > Vol 6 > Issue 1

How Widespread is Strategic Partisan Voting in Congress? Revisiting “Backward Induction in the Wild”

Adam Zelizer, Harris School of Public Policy, The University of Chicago, USA, zelizer@uchicago.edu
 
Suggested Citation
Adam Zelizer (2025), "How Widespread is Strategic Partisan Voting in Congress? Revisiting “Backward Induction in the Wild”", Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy: Vol. 6: No. 1, pp 27-57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/113.00000116

Publication Date: 02 Apr 2025
© 2025 A. Zelizer
 
Subjects
Group choice and negotiation,  Individual decision making,  Strategic decision-making,  Public economics,  Voting,  Congress,  Legislatures,  Political economy,  Political parties,  Representation
 
Keywords
Congresspivotalitystrategic votingsequential voting
 

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In this article:
Research Design 
US Senate: 113th – 117th Congresses 
Strategic Partisan Voting in the US House and State Legislatures 
State Delegations and Strategic Partisan Voting in the US Senate 
Analytic Replication 
Implications 
Conclusion 
References 

Abstract

“Backward Induction in the Wild” by Spenkuch, Montagnes, and Magleby (BIW) claims that the US Senate’s alphabetical voting procedure affects legislators’ votes. Voting earlier allows senators to defect from their party to vote their district or personal preference. Its findings largely stand alone as evidence of widespread strategic roll call voting. I examine whether roll call voting in other time periods, legislatures, and research designs exhibits the same pattern. I find no evidence in recent congresses; in the US House or three state legislatures; or in a higher-powered research design in the US Senate. Replicating BIW’s original analysis reveals several limitations which raise questions about its findings. Finally, with a new dataset that matches voter preferences to senators’ votes on some of the most salient bills of the past two decades, I find no cases where a senator votes against their constituents and is pivotal. I conclude that ordered voting does not contribute meaningfully to partisan voting by influencing legislators’ perceived pivotality.

DOI:10.1561/113.00000116

Online Appendix | 113.00000116_app.pdf

This is the article's accompanying appendix.

DOI: 10.1561/113.00000116_app