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      Politicization and Responsiveness in Executive Agencies

      The Journal of Politics
      University of Chicago Press

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          Most cited references27

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          Understanding Interaction Models: Improving Empirical Analyses

          T. Brambor (2005)
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            The President and the Distribution of Federal Spending

            Scholarship on distributive politics focuses almost exclusively on the internal operations of Congress, paying particular attention to committees and majority parties. This article highlights the president, who has extensive opportunities, both ex ante and ex post , to influence the distribution of federal outlays. We analyze two databases that track the geographic spending of nearly every domestic program over a 24-year period—the largest and most comprehensive panels of federal spending patterns ever assembled. Using district and county fixed-effects estimation strategies, we find no evidence of committee influence and mixed evidence that majority party members receive larger shares of federal outlays. We find that districts and counties receive systematically more federal outlays when legislators in the president's party represent them.
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              Testing Pendleton's Premise: Do Political Appointees Make Worse Bureaucrats?

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Journal of Politics
                The Journal of Politics
                University of Chicago Press
                0022-3816
                1468-2508
                January 2019
                January 2019
                : 81
                : 1
                : 33-48
                Article
                10.1086/700270
                949b235c-73d1-4fab-92de-2bd81351bbe8
                © 2019
                History

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