In the New York Law Journal at this link: https://www.stroock.com/uploads/JG–NYLJ—2022-02-25.pdf
All posts by Richard Pildes
Political Extremism and the Decline in Competitive Districts
Terrific Shane Goldmacher deep dive, focused on Texas and Rep. Dan Crenshaw, on how the decline of competitive districts empowers the extremes and is going to make governing more difficult. This is also a story about the internal fragmentation… Continue reading
Political Fragmentation, Democratic Party Edition
From Politico: Squad member to deliver response to Biden SOTU
A member of the liberal “Squad” is delivering a formal response to President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address Tuesday.
In the speech, given on behalf of the… Continue reading
Political Fragmentation, Republican Edition
There two recent stories capture the internal fragmentation of the Republican Party, part of the larger story about political fragmentation more generally:
From the NYT: Fringe Scheme to Reverse 2020 Election Splits Wisconsin G.O.P.
From Politico: GOP Plunges Into Season … Continue reading
“For Beto O’Rourke, 2020 Still Haunts 2022”
After my earlier post on small donors in 2020 and the 2022 Texas’ governor’s race, I saw this NYT story. The subheading is in line with what that earlier story suggested:
Mr. O’Rourke’s remarks during his 2020 presidential campaign shadow… Continue reading
Have Small Donors Damaged Beto O’Rourke’s Election Prospects in the TX Governor’s Race?
Sarah Isgur has a long essay on Texas politics, at The Sweep, which is part of the The Dispatch and behind a paywall. The piece asserts that O’Rourke’s pursuit of small donors in his presidential bid led him to positions… Continue reading
Political Reforms to Combat Extremism
Here’s my latest NYT piece, which endorses Alaska’s Top-Four primary structure, a reform the Alaska Supreme Court recently upheld. My piece is along similar lines to those in Ned Foley’s Washington Post op-ed on the potential of the new… Continue reading
“Tennessee lawmakers pass ban on instant runoff voting”
Via Westport News:
Memphis voted to adopt RCV in 2008, but it’s never been employed, as a result of long-running litigation and administrative battles. Tennessee lawmakers passed a ban Monday against instant runoff voting in elections, a move that seeks… Continue reading
How Small Donor Extremism Influences the Types of Candidates who Run in Primaries
This National Journal piece from Josh Kraasner reports a couple intriguing, interlocking claims about the dynamics shaping the looming Republican primary contests.
He notes that large donors are not participating heavily for various reasons, in part because in crowded primary… Continue reading
How Party Leaders Respond to Fragmented Parties
The title on this LA Times story is With Biden’s agenda hanging by a thread, Democrats question Schumer-Klain strategy. Here are some excerpts:
For all the ire directed by liberal activists at two moderate senators who in recent weeks… Continue reading
“America faces greater division as parties draw safe seats for congressional districts”
From Sam Levine at the Guardian:
When millions of American voters head to the polls this autumn to vote for congressional candidates, the vast majority of their votes won’t matter at all.It’s an idea that’s anathema to the very idea… Continue reading
“Congress is passing a wave of bipartisan bills as Biden’s big plans stall”
From NBC News:
President Joe Biden‘s signature Build Back Better Act has stalled and his voting rights ambitions have fizzled. But Congress is suddenly racking up modest yet consequential victories, from protecting victims of sexual abuse and improving… Continue reading
“Candidate Ideology and Vote Choice in the 2020 US Presidential Election”
New empirical paper from David Brockman et al:
A prominent literature argues that moderate candidates perform better in general elections, but a competing literature that emphasizes voters’ partisan loyalties contests these predictions. The 2020 Democratic Presidential primary represented an opportunity… Continue reading
“‘Decimation’ of competitive seats could unleash climate primaries”
From E&E News, an interesting view on how the decline of competitive seats could affect the politics of climate legislation:
Democrats have fared better than expected in this year’s redrawing of House districts — but that’s not necessarily good… Continue reading