Does Partisan Polarization Lead to Policy Gridlock in California?
Abstract
Over the past 50 years, partisan polarization—the ideological distance between the typical Democratic and the average Republican legislator—has widened in California. This article asks whether growing polarization has led to increasing legislative gridlock. Borrowing the approach of the congressional literature to collect a new measure of gridlock by using journalistic sources, it charts the percentage of major issues that state leaders were unable to resolve in the first year of every gubernatorial term from 1931 to 2004. It finds that divided government dramatically increases the level of gridlock, that legislative party polarization exerts no direct effect, but that higher levels of polarization magnify the impact of divided government on gridlock.Recommended Citation
Kousser, Thad B.
(2010)
"Does Partisan Polarization Lead to Policy Gridlock in California?,"
California Journal of Politics and Policy:
Vol. 2
:
Iss.
2, Article 4.
DOI: 10.2202/1944-4370.1071
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/cjpp/vol2/iss2/4
