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Parties,Preferences, and Petitions: Discharge Behavior in the Modern House
Authors:SUSAN M. MILLER  L. MARVIN OVERBY
Affiliation:1. University of Missouri;2. Susan M. Miller <3. >4. is a Ph.D. candidate in political science;5. L. Marvin Overby <6. is the F.A. Middlebush Professor of Political Science, both at the University of Missouri, 113 Professional Building, Columbia, MO 65211.
Abstract:Although discharge petitions lie at the confluence of personal preferences, committee prerogatives, and party leadership in Congress, these procedures have received little scholarly scrutiny. We capitalize on the public nature of petition signatures since 1993 to examine the behavior of the most cross‐pressured members in discharge battles: bill sponsors and cosponsors belonging to the majority party who personally prefer the bills they have sponsored but who face party pressure not to sign the petitions that threaten the leadership's control of the legislative agenda. After controlling for personal preferences, we find a statistically significant partisan effect in the U.S. House, which further illuminates the “Where's the party?” debate.
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