Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

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Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000 Gary W. Cox, William B. Heller, and Mathew D. McCubbins

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Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000. Gary W. Cox, William B. Heller, and Mathew D. McCubbins. In all national assemblies of which we are aware, there are certain offices to which extraordinary agenda powers attach. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Page 1: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies

1988-2000Gary W. Cox, William B. Heller,

and Mathew D. McCubbins

Page 2: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

• In all national assemblies of which we are aware, there are certain offices to which extraordinary agenda powers attach.

• We define an agenda cartel as a set of agents possessing two key properties. – First, they collectively hold a controlling share of the agenda-

setting offices relevant to a given assembly. – Second, the cartel establishes a procedure for agreeing on

which proposals will be allowed access to the plenary session. Whether decentralized or centralized, formal or informal, Whether decentralized or centralized, formal or informal, this procedure amounts to investing k groups within the this procedure amounts to investing k groups within the cartel, C 1,...,Ck, with vetoes over the placement of cartel, C 1,...,Ck, with vetoes over the placement of proposals upon the plenary agendaproposals upon the plenary agenda.

Page 3: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Two subspecies of agenda cartel

• First, in parliamentary systems, it is often said that each pivotal party in a multi-party majority coalition wields an agenda veto. We call this a We call this a parliamentaryparliamentary agenda cartel. agenda cartel.

• Second, Cox and McCubbins (2002, 2005) suggest that any majority of the majority party can veto the placement of items on the floor agenda in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Page 4: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Agenda Power

• When a parliamentary agenda cartel exists, it is as if the legislative agenda were set as follows. – (1) Whoever wishes may introduce bills. – (2) In order for a bill to advance to the plenary session under the

current government, however, it must be acceptable to each veto player, or gatekeeper, C1,...,Ck.

– (3) Bills that are not vetoed ex ante are decide in plenary session under open rules with germaneness restrictions. The outcome of which, in a one-dimensional policy game, is that the enacted bill will be located at the location of the median voter’s ideal point (Black, Downs).

• In this model, the veto players should never lose In this model, the veto players should never lose (i.e., have an unwanted policy change forced upon (i.e., have an unwanted policy change forced upon them).them).

Page 5: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

The cartel thesis

• The cartel thesis is that, if a majority government forms, then it will also constitute an agenda cartel.

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Rolls and Roll Rates

• Operationally, if a majority of a party votes against a bill that nonetheless passes, we say that the party has been rolled. – Prior to the final passage stage, there are also sometimes clear

agenda-setting votes—that is, votes to determine whether the legislature will or will not consider in plenary session a particular bill. We also speak of parties being rolled on these initial agenda-setting motions, when they vote against them but the motion nonetheless passes. Under conditions of complete Under conditions of complete and perfect information and with costless action, if a party and perfect information and with costless action, if a party wields a veto, it should wields a veto, it should nevernever be rolled. be rolled.

• Roll rates are just the proportion of total votes on which a party was rolled. In what follows we examine only final passage votes or FPVs.

Page 7: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Floor Agenda (Median Voter) Model

• What if there is no agenda cartel and no party wields a veto?

• If we assume that all parties can be placed along a traditional left-right scale, so that successful bills necessarily propose to move policy toward the median legislator’s ideal point, then we have a very simple expectation: The median party is never rolled, while roll The median party is never rolled, while roll rates increase monotonically both to the left and to the rates increase monotonically both to the left and to the rightright..– The intuition behind this result is straightforward. The median

party cannot be rolled because it is not possible to form a majority that wants to move policy away from the median in a unidimensional model.

Page 8: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Cartel Agenda Model: Hypotheses H1) Under complete and perfect information, and with

costless gatekeeping, the roll rate of governmental parties will be zero.

H2) The roll rate of opposition parties should be higher than the roll rate of governmental parties, all else constant.

H3) The roll rates of opposition parties should increase the farther is their median ideal point from the floor median. That is, the greater is |m-F|, the greater an opposition party’s roll rate will be, all else constant. Government party roll rates, by contrast, should not be affected by distance from the assembly median.

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Predicted Effect of Distance on roll rates

Cartel Agenda Model

Floor Agenda Model

Majority Party 0 +

Minority Party + +

Page 10: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Relationship between distance and roll rates, in government parties, 1988-2000

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Distance and roll rates, government parties

Coefficient (z score)

Distance -2.28 (-1.70)

Constant -3.72 (-16.02) ***

Log Likelihood -495.25693

Psuedo R2 .09

N 39

Estimated using Extended Beta Binomial

*** - significant at .001 level

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Relationship between distance and roll rates, opposition parties, 1988-2000

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Distance and roll rates, opposition parties

Coefficient (z score)

Distance 2.11 (9.78)***

Constant -1.70 (-11.04) ***

Log Likelihood -7143.07

Psuedo R2 .16

N 99

Estimated using Extended Beta Binomial

*** - significant at .001 level

Page 14: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

O-L G-L G-M O-M O-R

Cartel Agenda Model PredictionsFloor Agenda Model Predictions

Legend: (1) O-L, Left Opposition Party; (2) O-M, ModerateOpposition Party; (3) O-R, Right Opposition Party; (4) G-L, Left

Government Party; (5) G-M, Median Government Party

Comparing Predictions of the Relationship Between Roll Rates and Distance for

the Floor Agenda Model and Cartel Agenda Model

Page 15: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Governments, Opposition and Roll Rates

• The following slides graph party roll rates, both for government parties and opposition parties (on the y-axis: rollrate) against a measure of the absolute value of distance (on the x-zxis: distance) between the party’s median voter and the assembly median (derived using the first dimension from a two-dimensional scaling, using Optimal Classification, see Poole 2005)

Page 16: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Governo De Mita April 1988 – May 1989

Govt. parties: DC - PSI - PSDI - PRI – PLI

Labels indicate govt. status: 1=in government; 0 = in opposition

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Governo Andreotti VIMay 1989 – March 1991

Govt. parties: DC - PSI - PSDI - PRI – PLI

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Governo Andreotti VIIMarch 1991- April 1992

Govt. parties: DC - PSI - PSDI - PLI

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Governo Amato I, April 1992 – April 1993

Govt. parties: DC . PSI . PSDI . PLI

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Governo CiampiApril 1993- April 1994

Govt. parties: DC - PSI - PSDI - PLI

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Governo Berlusconi I April 1994- Dec. 1994

Govt. parties: FI - LN - AN - CCD - UDC

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Governo ProdiNov. 1996 – Oct. 98Govt. party: l'Ulivo

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Governo D'Alema IOct. 1998 – Dec. 1999

Govt. parties: Ulivo - PDCI - UDR

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Page 24: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Governo D'Alema IIDec. 1999 - April 2000

Govt. parties: Ulivo - PDCI - UDR

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1993 Reforms

• There is no significant change in roll rates, for either the government or opposition parties, after the 1993 reforms.

Page 26: Agenda Power in the Italian Chamber of Deputies 1988-2000

Italy: A Case of Ex Post Veto Power?

• All majorities and governments rely on a mix of ex ante and ex post agenda control, together with party discipline, to control legislative outcomes.

• If party discipline is weak, then there is a greater reliance on gatekeeping and ex post vetoes, as in the US House and Senate and, it appears, in Italy.