Research
Articles
JONATHAN WOON,
Carnegie Mellon University
Direct Democracy and the Selection of Representative Institutions:
Voter Support for Apportionment Initiatives, 1924–62
If voters had the
opportunity to choose the characteristics of their representative institutions
directly, how would they do so? Voters in several states selected the
base of their state legislative apportionment through the initiative process
prior to the reapportionment revolution of the 1960s, which provides a
unique opportunity to answer this question. This study examines 13 such
initiatives in four states between 1924 and 1962. Four factors are hypothesized
to influence vote choice on these initiatives: urban-rural conflict, partisanship,
race, and economic self-interest. Through regression analysis of the county-level
vote in these elections I find that economic self-interest consistently
influences voter support for apportionment initiatives while these other
factors influence it only occasionally. This finding suggests that distributive
politics drive voters' evaluation of representative institutions and that
the influence of other political factors depends on the historical and
local context of an initiative.
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