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Erschienen in: Public Choice 1-2/2022

03.05.2022

Congressional apportionment and the fourteenth amendment

verfasst von: Keith L. Dougherty, Grace Pittman

Erschienen in: Public Choice | Ausgabe 1-2/2022

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Abstract

This paper examines state interest in the nine bases of congressional seat apportionment considered for the House of Representatives as part of the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution. We ask, what if voters preferred apportionments that delivered larger vote shares to their state? We then show that among all states, one basis of apportionment was a weak Condorcet winner, while the others were in a vote cycle. In both chambers of Congress, however, pure majority voting created orderings of the nine bases and a different Condorcet winner. Ironically, Congress did not select either Condorcet winner. Instead, a population-based apportionment was reported out of committee and passed both chambers as a consequence of agenda control and lack of pairwise voting. Our analysis provides an example of how agenda setting with incomplete information unintentionally can produce undesirable outcomes for a legislature.

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Fußnoten
1
A Condorcet winner is an alternative that a majority of voters prefer to all other alternatives in every pairwise contest.
 
2
A basis of apportionment is a principle for dividing legislative seats, such as population or numbers of male citizens. See Balinski and Young (1982) for an analysis of how such proportions (rational numbers) can be translated into seats (integers). A majority cycle exists if the group’s preferences for alternatives are intransitive. For example, if a majority of individuals preferred x to y, y to z, and z to x, then there would be a majority cycle.
 
3
A Condorcet ordering, if one exists, is the weak ranking of the apportionments in terms of dominance, ranked from Condorcet winner to Condorcet loser (i.e., from Condorcet winner to an alternative that a majority prefers less than every other alternative pairwise).
 
4
A state’s vote share is the proportion of legislative seats it receives from a given basis of apportionment. See Sect. 3 for details.
 
5
The House comprised 241 seats in 1866, which members expected to change after the 1870 census.
 
6
We consider voters from a state to be indifferent if the difference between two vote shares is less than 0.001. Much smaller cutoffs fail to create meaningful differences in the number of allocated seats. Much larger cutoffs fail to discriminate between bases of apportionment.
 
7
The online supplement provides tables of state vote shares from each basis of apportionment, a description of how vote shares were constructed, and the corresponding distributions of seats in a House with 242 members apportioned using the Vinton method.
 
8
Neither Stevens or Fessenden had the power to appoint committee members, like the Speaker of the House, nor did they have the power to organize systematic vote trades, like a modern party whip.
 
9
Vote shares produce the following Condorcet ordering among members of the JCR: C3\(\succ\)E\(\succ\)C1\(\succ\)P1\(\succ\)Q\(\succ\)C2
.
 
10
According to Article 1, Sect. 2 of the US Constitution, seats in the House of Representatives and any direct taxes laid by the national government had to be apportioned among the states according to the Three-Fifths Clause. Going forward, the JCR considered them as separate issues, with potentially different apportionments.
 
11
We did not extend our analysis to the 1890 census for three reasons: (1) the effects of demographic differences 24 years into the future should have had only minor effects on decision making in 1866; (2) demographic changes more than two decades into the future would have been estimated poorly by decision makers; and (3) our citizenship estimates for 1880 are extrapolated from a question asked by the 1870 census. Using 1870 figures to extrapolate citizens in 1890 is likely to create very imprecise data.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Congressional apportionment and the fourteenth amendment
verfasst von
Keith L. Dougherty
Grace Pittman
Publikationsdatum
03.05.2022
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Public Choice / Ausgabe 1-2/2022
Print ISSN: 0048-5829
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-7101
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11127-022-00974-6

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