A lack of direct electoral checks on government bureaucrats challenges norms of democratic accountability. One proposed solution is to increase the president’s control over federal agencies. It is, however, an open question as to whether voters will attribute responsibility to the president even when in charge of agencies. A key empirical challenge has been that presidential control is not randomly assigned across agencies. To overcome this issue, I compare two agencies that enforce the same policy but differ in insulation from presidential control. I examine a large, unique dataset of news coverage, showing that news coverage of the presidentially-controlled agency features more politicized content that ties the agency to the president. I then demonstrate experimentally that this political content increases attribution of control to the president. The results support theories that claim agency design moderates voter attribution of responsibility to the president. This paper broadly adds to the literature on institutional design and the determinants of agency discretion.
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18 September 2014
Research Article|
September 18 2014
Institutional Design and the Attribution of Presidential Control: Insulating the President from Blame * Available to Purchase
Alex I. Ruder
Alex I. Ruder
Department of Politics,
Princeton University
, Princeton, NJ, 08544, USA
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*
Many individuals contributed guidance and feedback on this project. I thank R. Douglas Arnold, Nolan McCarty, Kosuke Imai, Matias Iaryczower, David Mimno, Marc Meredith, Marc Ratkovic, Deborah Beim, and especially members of the research working group: Scott Abramson, Michael Barber, Graeme Blair, Jaquilyn Waddell Boie, Kentaro Hirose, In Song Kim, Carlos Velasco Rivera, Yuki Shiraito, and Meredith Wilf. I also thank the editors and anonymous referees for excellent comments.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2014 A. I. Ruder
2014
A. I. Ruder
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2014) 9 (3): 301–335.
Citation
Ruder AI (2014), "Institutional Design and the Attribution of Presidential Control: Insulating the President from Blame *". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 9 No. 3 pp. 301–335, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00013093
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