On Party Platforms, Mandates, and Government Spending
Gary King, Michael Laver. 1993.
"On Party Platforms, Mandates, and Government Spending".
American Political Science Review, 87, Pp. 744–750.

Abstract
In their 1990 Review article, Ian Budge and Richard Hofferbert analyzed the relationship between party platform emphases, control of the White House, and national government spending priorities, reporting strong evidence of a “party mandate” connection between them. Gary King and Michael Laver successfully replicate the original analysis, critique the interpretation of the causal effects, and present a reanalysis showing that platforms have small or nonexistent effects on spending. In response, Budge, Hofferbert, and Michael McDonald agree that their language was somewhat inconsistent on both interactions and causality but defend their conceptualization of “mandates” as involving only an association, not necessarily a causal connection, between party commitments and government policy. Hence, while the causes of government policy are of interest, noncausal associations are sufficient as evidence of party mandates in American politics.
Harvard Dataverse:
Replication data for: On Party Platforms, Mandates, and Government Spending
See Also
- [Dataset] Replication data for: On Party Platforms, Mandates, and Government Spending
- [Paper] Book Review of `Forecasting Presidential Elections' (1985)
- [Paper] Did Illegal Overseas Absentee Ballots Decide the 2000 U.S. Presidential Election? (2004)
- [Paper] Do Nonpartisan Programmatic Policies Have Partisan Electoral Effects? Evidence from Two Large Scale Experiments (2020)
- [Paper] Estimating Partisan Bias of the Electoral College Under Proposed Changes in Elector Apportionment (2012)
- [Paper] Estimating the Probability of Events That Have Never Occurred: When Is Your Vote Decisive? (1998)
- [Paper] No Evidence on Directional Vs. Proximity Voting (1999)
- [Paper] Ordinary Economic Voting Behavior in the Extraordinary Election of Adolf Hitler (2008)