Buying Time: Moneyed Interests and the Mobilization of Bias in Congressional Committees

Over the last two decades institutional critics have increasingly charged that moneyed interests dominate the legislative process in Congress. Systematic research on campaign contributions and members' floor voting, however, provides little supporting evidence. We develop a view of the member-donor relationship that questions the theoretical underpinnings of the vote-buying hypothesis itself and suggests two alternative claims: (1) the effects of group expenditures are more likely to appear in committee than on the floor; and (2) the behavior most likely to be affected is members' legislative involvement, not their votes. In order to test this account, we specify a model of committee participation and estimate it using data from three House committees. In contrast to the substantial literature on contributions and roll calls, our analysis provides solid support for the importance of moneyed interests in the legislative process. We also find evidence that members are more responsive to organized business interests within their districts than to unorganized voters even when voters have strong preferences and the issue at stake is salient. Such findings suggest several important implications for our understanding of political money, interest groups, and the representativeness of legislative deliberations.

[1]  David R. Mayhew Congress: The Electoral Connection , 1975 .

[2]  D. Rubinfeld,et al.  Econometric models and economic forecasts , 2002 .

[3]  H. Chappell Campaign Contributions and Congressional Voting: A Simultaneous Probit-Tobit Model , 1982 .

[4]  James F. Herndon Access, Record, and Competition as Influences on Interest Group Contributions to Congressional Campaigns , 1982, The Journal of Politics.

[5]  R. Carson,et al.  A Method of Estimating the Personal Ideology of Political Representatives , 1984, American Political Science Review.

[6]  G. Jacobson Money in congressional elections , 1980 .

[7]  Michael C. Munger,et al.  Legislators and Interest Groups: How Unorganized Interests Get Represented , 1986, American Political Science Review.

[8]  Richard F. Fenno Home Style : House Members in Their Districts , 1978 .

[9]  P. Stern The Best Congress Money Can Buy , 1988 .

[10]  D. Evans Oil PACs and Aggressive Contribution Strategies , 1988, The Journal of Politics.

[11]  Richard L. Hall Participation and Purpose in Committee Decision Making , 1987, American Political Science Review.

[12]  The Power of Subcommittees , 1990, The Journal of Politics.

[13]  F. Wayman Arms Control and Strategic Arms Voting in the U.S. Senate , 1985 .

[14]  K. L. Schlozman,et al.  Organized interests and American democracy , 1986 .

[15]  Richard A. Smith Advocacy, Interpretation, and Influence in the U.S. Congress , 1984, American Political Science Review.

[16]  Paul H. Rubin,et al.  Congressman, Constituents, and Contributors , 1982 .

[17]  J. D. Gopoian,et al.  What Makes PACs Tick? An Analysis of the Allocation Patterns of Economic Interest Groups , 1984 .

[18]  John E. Jackson Constituencies and Leaders in Congress: Their Effects on Senate Voting Behavior , 1974 .

[19]  D. King,et al.  Public Goods, Private Interests, and Representation , 1989, American Political Science Review.

[20]  R. Arnold Congress and the Bureaucracy: A Theory of Influence , 1979 .

[21]  Donald C. Keenan,et al.  Congressmen, constituents, and contributors : determinants of roll call voting in the House of Representatives , 1982 .

[22]  Elizabeth A. Drew Politics and Money , 1983 .

[23]  K. Shepsle,et al.  U. S. Congressman as Enterprise , 1981 .

[24]  W. Welch Campaign Contributions and Legislative Voting: Milk Money and Dairy Price Supports , 1982 .

[25]  Ian H Maitland Interest Groups and Economic Growth Rates , 1985, The Journal of Politics.

[26]  J. Grenzke Candidate Attributes and Pac Contributions , 1989 .

[27]  J. Berry,et al.  The Interest Group Society , 1984 .

[28]  J. Grenzke PACs and the Congressional Supermarket: The Currency is Complex , 1989 .

[29]  A. Wilhite,et al.  Labor PAC contributions and labor legislation: A simultaneous logit approach , 1987 .

[30]  J. R. Wright Contributions, Lobbying, and Committee Voting in the U.S. House of Representatives , 1990, American Political Science Review.

[31]  Lester W. Milbrath The Washington lobbyists , 1963 .

[32]  Daniel M. Ogden join,et al.  The giant jigsaw puzzle , 1978 .

[33]  John R. Chamberlin,et al.  Representative Deliberations and Representative Decisions: Proportional Representation and the Borda Rule , 1983, American Political Science Review.

[34]  G. Durden,et al.  Determining Legislative Preferences on the Minimum Wage: An Economic Approach , 1976, Journal of Political Economy.

[35]  David C. Kozak Congress, the Bureaucracy, and Public Policy , 1980 .

[36]  J. R. Wright PACs, Contributions, and Roll Calls: An Organizational Perspective , 1985, American Political Science Review.

[37]  E. Hanushek Statistical methods for social scientists , 1977 .

[38]  Jack L. Walker,et al.  Interest Groups, Iron Triangles and Representative Institutions in American National Government , 1984, British Journal of Political Science.

[39]  John W. Kingdon Congressmen's voting decisions , 1973 .

[40]  Morris P. Fiorina,et al.  Representatives, roll calls, and constituencies , 1974 .

[41]  Capital Corruption: The New Attack on American Democracy , 1988 .

[42]  Steven S. Smith,et al.  Committees in Congress , 1984 .

[43]  R. Salisbury Interest Representation: The Dominance of Institutions , 1984, American Political Science Review.

[44]  Michael C. Munger,et al.  The impact of legislator attributes on interest-group campaign contributions , 1986 .

[45]  D. Matthews U.S. Senators and their world , 1961 .

[46]  Linda L. Fowler How Interest Groups Select Issues for Rating Voting Records of Members of the U. S. Congress , 1982 .