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      Campaign Contributions and Access to Congressional Offices: Patterns in Foreign Lobbying Data

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      Political Research Quarterly
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          Do lobbyists contribute money to legislators to build relationships in government? I show that lobbyists deploy resources strategically to get access to officials by analyzing newly available data on foreign lobbying in the U.S. government from 1998 to 2019, which contain information on lobbyists’ campaign contributions and contact with officials. Using supervised machine learning models, I identify lobbyist requests for access to members of Congress and classify them as either successful or unsuccessful. The data show that lobbyists request access almost exclusively to legislators to whom they made campaign contributions. Furthermore, lobbyists who contributed money to legislators are more likely to gain access to them than lobbyists who did not, but only if the legislators are ideologically similar and in the same party. While the data and research design I employ do not allow me to infer causal influence of contributions on access, these results suggest that lobbyists make contributions to foster an environment conducive to contact with like-minded officials.

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          Most cited references40

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          Buying Time: Moneyed Interests and the Mobilization of Bias in Congressional Committees

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            Lobbying as Legislative Subsidy

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              Legislators and Interest Groups: How Unorganized Interests Get Represented

              This paper derives a supply price for public policy using a constrained maximization model. In the model, three sets of agents each have preferences over outcomes: organized interest groups offer campaign contributions to improve their own wealth, voters offer votes to obtain outcomes closer to their most preferred outcomes, and legislators seek both campaign contributions and votes to obtain reelection. A given legislator's supply price for policy is shown to depend on the productivity of his effort, as determined by committee assignments, priority and ability, and by the preferences of his unorganized constituency in the home district. Two extreme assumptions about the effectiveness of campaign spending in eliciting votes are used to illustrate the comparative statics properties of the model. The prediction of the model is that interest groups will, in general, seek out legislators whose voters are indifferent to the policy the interest group seeks. Thus, voters who do have preferences over policy are in effect represented, even though they are not organized.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Political Research Quarterly
                Political Research Quarterly
                SAGE Publications
                1065-9129
                1938-274X
                September 2022
                July 10 2021
                September 2022
                : 75
                : 3
                : 812-828
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Princeton University, NJ, USA
                Article
                10.1177/10659129211029711
                e0ecaabc-0b64-4aca-91ed-764081a1a674
                © 2022

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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