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Explaining Explanations: How Legislators Explain their Policy Positions and How Citizens React
Authors:Christian R Grose  Neil Malhotra  Robert Parks Van Houweling
Institution:1. University of Southern California;2. Stanford Graduate School of Business;3. University of California, Berkeley
Abstract:Legislators claim that how they explain their votes matters as much as or more than the roll calls themselves. However, few studies have systematically examined legislators’ explanations and citizen attitudes in response to these explanations. We theorize that legislators strategically tailor explanations to constituents in order to compensate for policy choices that are incongruent with constituent preferences, and to reinforce policy choices that are congruent. We conduct a within‐subjects field experiment using U.S. senators as subjects to test this hypothesis. We then conduct a between‐subjects survey experiment of ordinary people to see how they react to the explanatory strategies used by senators in the field experiment. We find that most senators tailor their explanations to their audiences, and that these tailored explanations are effective at currying support—especially among people who disagree with the legislators’ roll‐call positions.
Keywords:Congress  Senate  immigration policy  legislatures  representation  citizen behavior  voting  political behavior  field experiment  survey experiment  American politics
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