El efecto del calendario electoral en la autoselección de las cohortes legislativas y el comportamiento legislativo en Argentina, 1983–2007

Contenido principal del artículo

Adrian Lucardi
Juan Pablo Micozzi

Resumen

¿Cómo afectan las oportunidades electorales a las estrategias de carrera de los políticos? ¿En qué medida éstos responden estratégicamente a los incentivos que ofrece el calendario electoral? En este trabajo argumentamos que en una legislatura que combina patrones de ambición no estática con un calendario electoral escalonado, políticos con distintas características deberían mostrar distinta predisposición a competir en elecciones simultáneas o intermedias. Más concretamente, los políticos sin experiencia ejecutiva previa deberían candidatearse en las elecciones legislativas de medio término para aumentar su visibilidad entre los votantes, mientras que aquellos más experimentados lo deberían hacer en comicios concurrentes. Corroboramos estas afirmaciones usando datos de los miembros de la Cámara de Diputados argentina entre 1983 y 2007.

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.

Detalles del artículo

Cómo citar
Lucardi, A., & Micozzi, J. P. (2021). El efecto del calendario electoral en la autoselección de las cohortes legislativas y el comportamiento legislativo en Argentina, 1983–2007. Administración Pública Y Sociedad (APyS), (11), 03–29. Recuperado a partir de https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/APyS/article/view/33856
Sección
Artículos

Citas

Ames, Barry. 2001. The Deadlock of Democracy in Brazil. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Ansolabehere, Stephen, John Mark Hansen, Shigeo Hirano, y James M. Snyder. 2006. “The Decline of Competition in U.S. Primary Elections, 1908–2004.” En The Marketplace of Democracy: Electoral Competition and American Politics, ed. Michael McDonald y John Curtis Samples. Washington, DC: Cato Institute, 74–101.

Ansolabehere, Stephen, y James M. Snyder. 2004. “Using Term Limits to Estimate Incumbency Advantages When Officeholders Retire Strategically.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 29: 487–515.

Banks, Jeffrey S., y D. Roderick Kiewiet. 1989. “Explaining Patterns of Candidate Competition in Congressional Elections.” American Journal of Political Science 33: 997–1015.

Bernhard, William, y Brian R. Sala. 2006. “The Remaking of an American Senate: The 17th

Amendment and Ideological Responsiveness.” Journal of Politics 68: 345–57.

Besley, Timothy, y Marta Reynal-Querol. 2011. “Do Democracies Select More Educated Leaders?” American Political Science Review 105: 552–66.

Bonvecchi, Alejandro, y Germán Lodola. 2011. “The Dual Logic of Intergovernmental Transfers: Presidents, Governors, and the Politics of Coalition-Building in Argentina.” Publius: Journal of Federalism 41: 179–206.

Brollo, Fernanda, Tommaso Nannicini, Roberto Perotti, y Guido Tabellini. 2013. “The Political Resource Curse.” American Economic Review 103: 1759–96.

Calvo, Ernesto, y Juan Pablo Micozzi. 2005. “The Governor’s Backyard: A Seat-Vote Model of Electoral Reform for Subnational Multiparty Races.” Journal of Politics 67: 1050–74.

Calvo, Ernesto, y María Victoria Murillo. 2004. “Who Delivers? Partisan Clients in the Argentine Electoral Market.” American Journal of Political Science 48: 742–57.

Calvo, Ernesto, y María Victoria Murillo. 2005. “A New Iron Law of Argentine Politics? Partisanship, Clientelism, and Governability in Contemporary Argentina.” En Argentine Democracy. The Politics of Institutional Weakness, ed. Steven Levitsky y María Victoria Murillo. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 207–26.

Carey, John M. 1998. Term Limits and Legislative Representation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Carey, John M., y John Polga-Hecimovich. 2006. “Primary Elections and Candidate Strength in Latin America.” Journal of Politics 68: 530–43.

Carson, Jamie L. 2003. “Strategic Interaction and Candidate Competition in U.S. House Elections: Empirical Applications of Probit and Strategic Probit Models.” Political Analysis 11: 368–80.

Carson, Jamie L. 2005. “Strategy, Selection, and Candidate Competition in U.S. House and Senate Elections.” Journal of Politics 67: 1–28.

Chasquetti, Daniel, y Juan Pablo Micozzi. 2014. “The Subnational Connection in Unitary Regimes: Progressive Ambition and Legislative Behavior in Uruguay.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 39: 87–112.

Cox, Gary W., y Jonathan N. Katz. 2002. Elbridge Gerry’s Salamander: The Electoral Consequences of the Reapportionment Revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Cox, Gary W., y Mathew D. McCubbins. 2005. Setting the Agenda: Responsible Party Government in the U.S. House of Representatives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Crisp, Brian F., y Scott W. Desposato. 2004. “Constituency Building in Multimember Districts: Collusion or Conflict?” Journal of Politics 66: 136–56.

Crisp, Brian F., Maria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Bradford S. Jones, Mark P. Jones, y Michelle M. Taylor- Robinson. 2004. “Vote-Seeking Incentives and Legislative Representation in Six Presidential Democracies.” Journal of Politics 66: 823–46.

Crisp, Brian F., Kristin Kanthak, y Jenny Leijonhufvud. 2004. “The Reputations Legislators Build: With Whom Should Representatives Collaborate?” American Political Science Review 98: 703–16.

Cunow, Saul, Barry Ames, Scott Desposato, y Lucio Renno. 2012. “Reelection and Legislative Power: Surprising Results from Brazil.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 37: 533–58.

Dal Bo, Ernesto, Pedro Dal Bo, y Rafael Di Tella. 2006. “‘Plata o Plomo?’: Bribe and Punishment in a Theory of Political Influence.” American Political Science Review 100: 41–53.

Dal Bo, Ernesto, y Martín A. Rossi. 2011. “Term Length and the Effort of Politicians.” Review of Economic Studies 78: 1237–63.

De Luca, Miguel, Mark P. Jones, y María Inés Tula. 2002. “Back Rooms or Ballot Boxes? Candidate Nomination in Argentina.” Comparative Political Studies 35:413–36.

Fiorina, Morris P. 1977. “The Case of the Vanishing Marginals: The Bureaucracy Did It.” American Political Science Review 71: 177–81.

Franceschet, Susan, y Jennifer M. Piscopo. 2014. “Sustaining Gendered Practices? Power, Parties, and Elite Political Networks in Argentina.” Comparative Political Studies 47: 85–110.

Fukumoto, Kentaro, y Yusaku Horiuchi. 2011. “Making Outsiders’ Votes Count: Detecting Electoral Fraud through a Natural Experiment.” American Political Science Review 105: 586–603.

Fukumoto, Kentaro, y Akitaka Matsuo. 2015. “The Effects of Election Proximity on Participatory Shirking: The Staggered-Term Chamber as a Laboratory.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 40: 599–625.

Gailmard, Sean, y Jeffery A. Jenkins. 2009. “Agency Problems, the 17th Amendment, and Representation in the Senate.” American Journal of Political Science 53: 324–42.

Galasso, Vincenzo, y Tommaso Nannicini. 2011. “Competing on Good Politicians.” American Political Science Review 105: 79–99.

Gervasoni, Carlos. 2010. “A Rentier Theory of Subnational Regimes: Fiscal Federalism, Democracy, and Authoritarianism in the Argentine Provinces.” World Politics 62: 302–40.

Goetz, Klaus H., Jennifer Durmeier, Christian Stecker, y David Willumsen. 2014. “Heterotemporal Parliamentarism: Does Staggered Membership Renewal Matter?” Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen. Manuscrito sin publicar.

Goldenberg, Edie N., y Michael W. Traugott. 1987. “Mass Media in US Congressional Elections.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 12: 317–39.

Hirano, Shigeo, y James M. Snyder. 2014. “Primary Elections and the Quality of Elected Officials.” Quarterly Journal of Political Science 9: 473–500.

Htun, Mala, Marina Lacalle, y Juan Pablo Micozzi. 2013. “Does Women’s Presence Change Legislative Behavior? Evidence from Argentina, 1983–2007.” Journal of Politics in Latin America 5: 95–125.

Jacobson, Gary C. 1989. “Strategic Politicians and the Dynamics of U.S. House Elections, 1946–86.” American Political Science Review 83: 773–93.

Jacobson, Gary C., y Samuel Kernell. 1983. Strategy and Choice in Congressional Elections. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

Jones, Mark P. 2002. “Explaining the High Level of Party Discipline in the Argentine Congress.” En Legislative Politics in Latin America, ed. Scott Morgenstern y Benito Nacif. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 147–84.

Jones, Mark P. 2008. “The Recruitment and Selection of Legislative Candidates in Argentina.” En Pathways to Power. Political Recruitment and Candidate Selection in Latin America, ed. Peter Siavelis y Scott Morgenstern. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania State University Press, 41–75.

Jones, Mark P., y Wonjae Hwang. 2005. “Party Government in Presidential Democracies: Extending Cartel Theory beyond the U.S. Congress.” American Journal of Political Science 49: 267–82.

Jones, Mark P., Wonjae Hwang, y Juan Pablo Micozzi. 2009. “Government and Opposition in the Argentine Congress, 1989–2007: Understanding Inter-Party Dynamics through Roll Call Vote Analysis.” Journal of Politics in Latin America 1: 67–96.

Jones, Mark P., Sebastián Saiegh, Pablo T. Spiller, y Mariano Tommasi. 2002. “Amateur Legislators – Professional Politicians: The Consequences of Party-Centered Electoral Rules in a Federal System.” American Journal of Political Science 46: 656–69.

Kemahlioglu, Ozge, Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro, y Shigeo Hirano. 2009. “Why Primaries in Latin American Presidential Elections?” Journal of Politics 71: 339–52.

Kernell, Samuel. 1978. “Explaining Presidential Popularity. How Ad Hoc Theorizing, Misplaced Emphasis, and Insufficient Care in Measuring One’s Variables Refuted Common Sense and Led Conventional Wisdom Down the Path of Anomalies.” American Political Science Review 72: 506–22.

Langston, Joy, y Javier Aparicio. 2009. “The Past as Future: Prior Political Experience and Career Choices in Mexico, 1997–2006.” Documento de Trabajo #209. CIDE.

Lazarus, Jeffrey. 2005. “Unintended Consequences: Anticipation of General Election Outcomes and Primary Election Divisiveness.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 30: 435–61.

Lazarus, Jeffrey. 2008a. “Buying In: Testing the Rational Model of Candidate Entry.” Journal of Politics 70: 837–50.

Lazarus, Jeffrey. 2008b. “Incumbent Vulnerability and Challenger Entry in Statewide Elections.” American Politics Research 36: 108–29.

Lodola, Germán. 2009. “La Estructura Subnacional de las Carreras Políticas en Argentina y Brasil.” Desarrollo Económico 49: 247–86.

Lublin, David Ian. 1994. “Quality, Not Quantity: Strategic Politicians in U.S. Senate Elections, 1952–1990.” Journal of Politics 56: 228–41.

Lucardi, Adrián, y María Gabriela Almaraz. 2015. “The Politics of Institutional Change. The Removal of Executive Term Limits in the Argentine Provinces, 1983–2013.” Washington University in St. Louis. Manuscrito sin publicar. [Publicado como: Lucardi, Adrián, y María Gabriela Almaraz. 2017. “With a Little Help from the Opposition? Relaxing Term Limits in the Argentine Provinces, 1983–2017.” Journal of Politics in Latin America 9: 49–90.]

Mayhew, David R. 1974. Congress: The Electoral Connection. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

Micozzi, Juan Pablo. 2013. “Does Electoral Accountability Make a Difference? Direct Elections, Career Ambition, and Legislative Performance in the Argentine Senate.” Journal of Politics 75: 137–49.

Micozzi, Juan Pablo. 2014a. “Alliance for Progress? Multilevel Ambition and Patterns of Cosponsorship in the Argentine House.” Comparative Political Studies 47: 1186–1208.

Micozzi, Juan Pablo. 2014b. “From House to Home: Strategic Bill Drafting in Multilevel Systems with Non-Static Ambition.” Journal of Legislative Studies 20: 265–84.

Negretto, Gabriel L. 2006. “Choosing How to Choose Presidents: Parties, Military Rulers, and Presidential Elections in Latin America.” Journal of Politics 68: 421–33.

Negretto, Gabriel L. 2013. Making Constitutions: Presidents, Parties, and Institutional Choice in Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Nicholson, Stephen P. 2003. “The Political Environment and Ballot Proposition Awareness.” American Journal of Political Science 47: 403–10.

Patty, John W. 2008. “Equilibrium Party Government.” American Journal of Political Science 52: 636– 55.

Pereira, Carlos, y Lucio Renno. 2013. “‘Should I Stay or Should I Go?’ Explaining Political Ambition by Electoral Success in Brazil.” Journal of Politics in Latin America 5: 73–95.

Powell, G. Bingham Jr. 2000. Elections as Instruments of Democracy: Majoritarian and Proportional Visions. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

Power, Timothy J. 2000. The Political Right in Postauthoritarian Brazil: Elites, Institutions, and Democratization. University Park, PA: Penn State Press.

Rosas, Guillermo, y Joy Langston. 2011. “Gubernatorial Effects on the Voting Behavior of National Legislators.” Journal of Politics 73: 477–93.

Samuels, David J. 2003. Ambition, Federalism, and Legislative Politics in Brazil. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Schiller, Wendy J. 1995. “Senators as Political Entrepreneurs: Using Bill Sponsorship to Shape Legislative Agendas.” American Journal of Political Science 39: 186–203.

Schlesinger, Joseph A. 1966. Ambition and Politics: Political Careers in the United States. Chicago: Rand MacNally.

Shepsle, Kenneth A., Robert P. Van Houweling, Samuel J. Abrams, y Peter C. Hanson. 2009. “The Senate Electoral Cycle and Bicameral Appropriations Politics.” American Journal of Political Science 53: 343–59.

Shih, Victor, Christopher Adolph, y Mingxing Liu. 2012. “Getting Ahead in the Communist Party: Explaining the Advancement of Central Committee Members in China.” American Political Science Review 106: 166–87.

Squire, Peverill. 1988. “Career Opportunities and Membership Stability in Legislatures.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 13: 65–82.

Squire, Peverill. 1998. “Membership Turnover and the Efficient Processing of Legislation.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 23: 23–32.

Taylor, Michelle M. 1992. “Formal versus Informal Incentive Structures and Legislator Behavior: Evidence from Costa Rica.” Journal of Politics 54: 1055–73.

Titiunik, Rocío. 2016. “Drawing Your Senator from a Jar: Term Length and Legislative Behavior.” Political Science Research and Methods 4: 293–316.

Treul, Sarah A. 2009. “Ambition and Party Loyalty in the U.S. Senate.” American Politics Research 37: 449–64.

Van der Silk, Jack R., y Samuel J. Pernacciaro. 1979. “Office Ambitions and Voting Behavior in the US Senate: A Longitudinal Study.” American Politics Research 7: 198–224.

Weingast, Barry R., y William J. Marshall. 1988. “The Industrial Organization of Congress; Or, Why Legislatures, Like Firms, Are Not Organized as Markets.” Journal of Political Economy 96: 132–163.