Trends in the Partisan Composition of State Legislatures: A Response to Fiorina
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 91 (1) , 148-155
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2952265
Abstract
The percentage of state legislative seats won by Democrats in nonsouthern states has increased steadily since World War II. Fiorina (1994) argues that this is because of the professionalization of state legislatures: Legislatures now meet longer and pay higher salaries; legislative positions which require more time are less attractive to Republicans, who can make more money elsewhere; higher salaries attract Democrats, who make less in the private sector. That analysis has several serious flaws. First, nonsouthern states have gradually become more Democratic at all levels as part of a long-term regional political realignment. The rise in Democrats in legislatures outside the South is due more to this realignment than to legislative professionalization. Second, trends in southern states contradict his hypothesis. Professionalization has increased, but state legislatures are becoming more Republican. Finally, Fiorina's analysis is worth careful reconsideration because it suggests that there is little connection between constituencies and partisan outcomes.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Issue EvolutionPublished by JSTOR ,2020
- Divided Government in the American States: A Byproduct of Legislative Professionalism?American Political Science Review, 1994
- The Pursuit & Retention of Legislative Office in New York, 1870-1990: Reconsidering Sources of ChangePolity, 1993
- Limiting Legislative TermsPublished by Test accounts ,1992
- Issue EvolutionPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1989
- Realignment: New Party Coalitions and the Nationalization of the SouthThe Journal of Politics, 1987
- Issues in Multiple RegressionAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1968
- The American Legislative Process: Congress and the StatesThe Western Political Quarterly, 1964
- Secular Realignment and the Party SystemThe Journal of Politics, 1959