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First published on June 18, 2008 Political Research Quarterly 2008, doi:10.1177/1065912908319573
The Role of Personal Attributes in African American Roll-Call Voting Behavior in Congress
Michael S. Rocca,
Gabriel R. Sanchez*,
and
Ron Nikora
University of New Mexico
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sanchezg{at}unm.edu.
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Abstract |
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In this research note, the authors explore the extent to which personal attributes influence voting behavior for African American members of Congress. The authors test the relationship between legislators personal attributes and Poole and Rosenthals DW-NOMINATE scores for black members of the 101st to 108th Congresses. The results suggest that personal attributes matter. They increase the explained variance in the models, and factors such as generational cohort, religion, and military experience are statistically significant. These results suggest that while descriptive members of Congress share much in common, they should not be interpreted as monolithic with respect to congressional voting.

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