Updated April 2019
A paper by Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page entitled "Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups and Average Citizens" provides us with an interesting analysis of who is really in control of American public policy, an issue that many of us already suspect is controlled by a small group of Americans.
A paper by Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page entitled "Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups and Average Citizens" provides us with an interesting analysis of who is really in control of American public policy, an issue that many of us already suspect is controlled by a small group of Americans.
There are four theoretical traditions
in the study of American politics, each with a different set of actors who form
a critical role in determining government policies:
1.) Majoritarian Electoral Democracy:
this tradition attributes government policies to the collective will of its
citizens who are empowered through the mechanism of democratic elections.
This can also be viewed as the "electoral reward and
punishment" version of democracy where voters judge the results of
government policies and how well these policies have satisfied their interests
and values.
2.) Economic-Elite Domination: this
tradition attributes government policies to the will of individuals who have
substantial economic resources, for example, high levels of wealth or income or
social status including positions within political parties, managerial
and executive roles in corporations, top-level positions in the executive,
legislative and judicial branches of government and high military rank.
For the purposes of this study, the authors focus on the importance of
economic elites.
3.) Majoritarian Pluralism: this
tradition attributes government policies to the will of a majority of the
population with the majority being categorized by religion, language, social
class or other intensifying factor. In the majoritarian tradition, mass
participation and majority rule are required for democracy to function.
4.) Biased Pluralism: this tradition
attributes government policies to and unrepresentative universe of interest
groups, particularly from the business sector. In this tradition, policy
outcomes tend to tilt toward the wishes of corporations, businesses and
professional organizations.
As such, here is a table showing the
theoretical predictions concerning the influence of each set of groups on
government policies:
We should keep in mind that we find the
following:
1.) in some cases, the wealthy among us
want the same thing from government policies as the poorest among us.
2.) U.S. membership organizations,
particularly labour unions and organizations like the American Association of
Retired Persons, favour the same policies as average citizens.
3.) some U.S. membership organizations
take stands on key issues that represent only a fraction of average citizens -
for example, pro-life and pro-choice groups, pro-gun and pro-gun control
groups.
4.) the authors found that wealthy
Americans do not always share the same policy preferences as business-oriented
groups.
To test which of the four theoretical
traditions are most applicable to American politics, the authors assembled a
database which looked at the influence of public policy on affluent, poor and
middle income Americans. They assembled a database which consisted of
1,923 instances between 1981 and 2002 in which a national survey of the
American public asked a for/against question about a proposed change in
government policy which did not involve a Constitutional amendment or Supreme
Court ruling. In 1,779 of these original cases, income breakdowns were
provided by the respondents and, thus, were usable by the authors for their
analysis.
Here are the author's conclusions:
1.) a proposed policy change with low
support among economically-elite Americans (20 percent support) is adopted only
18 percent of the time.
2.) a proposed policy change with high
support among economically-elite Americans (80 percent support) is adopted 45
percent of the time.
3.) a proposed policy change with high
support among both groups (as defined above) is adopted about 56 percent of the
time.
4.) narrow pro-change public majority
cases got the policy changes that they wanted about 30 percent of the time.
5.) wide pro-change public majority
cases (80 percent public approval) got the policy changes that they wanted
about 43 percent of the time.
6.) ordinary citizens do not always
lose out; when the policies that they favour happened to line up with those of
the economic elites, there is a far greater change of the policies being
adopted.
The authors concluded that, from their
dataset, it appears that the traditionally held view of the Majoritarian
Electoral Democracy appears to be a complete failure; when the preferences of
organized groups and economic elites are controlled for in government proposed
policy changes:
"...the preferences of the average
American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically
non-significant impact upon public policy."
The authors also note that organized
and special interest groups, as a whole, do not substitute for the will of the
voting public.
Here are the
authors's conclusions:
"What do our findings say about
democracy in America? They certainly constitute troubling news
for advocates of "populistic" democracy, who
want governments to respond primarily or exclusively to the policy
preferences of their citizens. In the United States, our findings
indicate that they majority does not rule - at least not in the causal
sense of actually determining policy outcomes. When a majority of
citizens disagrees with economic elites or with organized interests, they
generally lose. Moreover, because of the strong status quo bias
built into the U.S. political system, even when fairly large majorities
of Americans favour policy change, they generally do not get it...
Americans do enjoy many features
central to democratic governance, such as regular elections, freedom
of speech and association, and a widespread (if still contested)
franchise. But, we believe that is policymaking is dominated by
powerful business organizations and a small number of affluent
Americans, then America's claims to be a democratic society are seriously
threatened." (my bold)
Let's close with this graphic from Open Secrets which
shows the list of the top 25 individual donors from the 2016 election
cycle:
Here is
a list of the top 25 organizational contributors:
Can we say plutocracy? Perhaps,
despite what Washington may think, the American style of democracy really isn't
what other nations should be aspiring to attain nor is it the type of democracy that the United States should force upon other nations.
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