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Staggered membership renewal and differential time horizons in second chambers. Staggering formulas, membership patterns, time horizons and their effects on both procedural and substantive dimensions of law-making

Subject Area Political Science
Term from 2012 to 2016
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 229826419
 
Final Report Year 2018

Final Report Abstract

Two of the key practical and normative questions in the study of politics are the issue of how to ensure that elected representatives have long enough time horizons to be able to effectively grapple with very difficult issues, and the issue of how to avoid elected politicians succumbing to the temptation to use the resources of the state which they control through their office to attempt to improve their chances of re-election by engaging in sub-optimal spending of public resources. One potential solution to these problems, which has been proposed at least going back to the debate regarding the ratification of the constitution of the United States (Hamilton, Jay, and Madison 1788), is to stagger the terms of representatives, so that only a part of them are up for re-election in any given election year. The logic is that this will both allow for the kind of long-term planning necessary for the successful functioning of the state, and will prevent the use of public resources to maximise chances of re-election, as those representatives not up for re-election will have no interest in doing so, and so would be expected to prevent their colleagues facing the electorate from doing so. Despite being used in the upper chambers of more than twenty democracies, the effects of staggered terms have been neglected in the study of politics. This project sought to conduct a comparative study of the effects of staggered terms in parliamentary regimes, studying the upper chambers of Australia, France, Germany, and Japan. In order to do so, we collected data on the activity levels of members of these upper chambers over extended periods of time, in order to be able to investigate the extent to which their behaviour was influenced by both their own time until re-election and the time until their colleagues faced re-election. The most interesting finding arising from the project was the clear tendency towards staggered terms having, at best, no effect, and at worst the exact opposite effect of that intended. Staggered terms encourage upper chamber members to become more active not only when their own election is approaching, but also when their colleagues are up for re-election. At the same time, the more frequent and larger number of elections required to accommodate staggered terms means that these lead to a multiplication of political cycles, rather than a reduction in their number.

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