Influence-seeking by outside groups is widespread in the federal bureaucracy, as evidenced by public expenditure data. But less is known about the strategies that underlie these expenditures. The literature on influence-seeking points to two possibilities. Groups can lobby policymakers to persuade them to take a specific action, or groups can monitor policymakers, as in “fire alarm” oversight, and report any unwanted action to Congress and other interested overseers. I exploit the fact that these two strategies have different implications for which policymakers will be targeted. Groups have an incentive to lobby their allies and persuadable would-be allies, and an incentive to monitor their adversaries. Using data on influence-seeking expenditures, I find that conservative groups disproportionately target their adversaries, which is consistent with monitoring, and that liberal groups disproportionately target their allies, which is consistent with lobbying. I discuss the implications for our understanding of democratic accountability in bureaucratic policymaking.
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22 January 2024
Research Article|
January 22 2024
Influence-seeking in the Federal Bureaucracy: Do Groups Lobby or Monitor Policymakers? Available to Purchase
Alex Acs
Alex Acs
Department of Political Science, The Ohio State University
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*I thank Ryan Dawe for his research assistance, and two anonymous reviewers and the editors at QJPS for their helpful comments and suggestions. Any remaining errors are my own.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2024 A. Acs
2024
A. Acs
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2024) 19 (1): 27–52.
Citation
Acs A (2024), "Influence-seeking in the Federal Bureaucracy: Do Groups Lobby or Monitor Policymakers?". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 19 No. 1 pp. 27–52, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00020133
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