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DEBORAH A. ORTH
Accountability in a Federal System:
The Governor, the President, and
Economic Expectations
How do people hold elected officials accountable for
expected economic conditions in a system of government in which jurisdiction
and responsibility are divided such as they are in the United States?
Due to the president's visibility, people may hold all elected officials
of the president's party responsible for economic conditions. Or, people
may be able to differentiate between state and national economic conditions
and jurisdictional responsibilities and hold governors of either party
accountable for state economic conditions. I use ordered probit to analyze
a pooled model of 13 individual-level mid-1990s Michigan opinion surveys
and find no evidence that individuals consistently rely on a presidency-centered
referenda model of cognition when evaluating the state's governor. Instead,
gubernatorial performance ratings reflect an incumbent-centered accountability
model. The evidence also suggests jurisdictional accountability, where
gubernatorial evaluations are influenced by state economic expectations,
but not by national economic expectations.
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