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Published March 2002 | public
Journal Article

Coalition and Party Formation in a Legislative Voting Game

Abstract

We examine a legislative voting game where decisions are to be made over both ideological and distributive dimensions. In equilibrium legislators prefer to make proposals for the two dimensions together, despite having preferences that are separable over the two dimensions. The equilibria exhibit interaction between the ideological and distributive dimensions, and the set of legislators who approve winning proposals does not always consist of ideologically adjacent legislators. There is more than one ideological decision that has a positive probability of being proposed and approved. We show that legislators can gain from forming political parties, and consider examples where predictions can be made about the composition of parties.

Additional Information

© 2001 Elsevier Science. Received 29 December 1998, Accepted 28 April 2000, Available online 25 May 2002. Financial support under NSF grant SBR 9507912 is gratefully acknowledged. We thank David Austen-Smith, Tim Feddersen, Richard McKelvey, Antonio Merlo, and Roger Myerson for helpful comments and discussions, and Steve Callander for calculations on one of the examples. We also thank the anonymous referees for their suggestions.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023