Can loyal party members be flexible negotiators? Impacts of constituent support, term limits and bipartisan roles
International Journal of Conflict Management
ISSN: 1044-4068
Article publication date: 30 June 2022
Issue publication date: 26 September 2022
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to conduct two experiments to provide insight into the impacts of Congressional party loyalty on negotiating flexibility. Constituent support, term limits and bipartisan roles were explored as possible moderators of polarization in American political negotiations.
Design/methodology/approach
Experiment 1 used a 2 (party loyalty: loyal/thoughtful) × 2 (constituent support: consistent/mixed districts) experimental design. In experiment 2, party loyalty was constant, and participants were assigned to one of four conditions created by a 2 (term limits: restricted/not restricted) × 2 (role: coordinator/whip) design. In both experiments, flexibility was measured as the percentage of movement on four key budget allocation issues. Participants were recruited using Prolific.
Findings
Experiment 1 demonstrated that loyalty produced less flexibility, particularly with regard to one’s own preferred issues. Constituent support did not influence flexibility. The second experiment found that absence of term limits and presence of bipartisan roles resulted in more movement on the other’s preferred issues.
Research limitations/implications
While the authors’ manipulations have experimental validity, further field research is suggested to assess the fidelity of the authors’ simulation and the ecological validity of the experimental findings.
Practical implications
These findings extend the list of situational levers that impact negotiation flexibility. In particular, based on the authors’ findings, embedding bipartisan roles into traditional Congressional processes could help increase negotiating flexibility and cooperation.
Originality/value
Both the experimental task and variables manipulated in these experiments are embedded in a US Congressional context.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors owe a large debt of gratitude to James N. Druckman for his many useful suggestions and insights about the study design, analyses and interpretations of the results.
Data availability: The data (.xlsx) and survey (.qsf) files can be accessed at the following anonymized link: https://osf.io/zx5kv/?view_only=2f72f25f6f884156b2c1093783e39dfe
Citation
Druckman, D., Parlamis, J. and Burns, Z.C. (2022), "Can loyal party members be flexible negotiators? Impacts of constituent support, term limits and bipartisan roles", International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 33 No. 5, pp. 741-761. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCMA-01-2022-0011
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited