A Right Restricted: Racial Threat and the Sponsorship of Restrictive Voting Laws

Q1 Social Sciences
Kevin T. Morris
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract In the aftermath of the United States’ 2020 presidential election, state legislatures have introduced and passed an unprecedented number of restrictive voting bills. While past research has looked at the state -level drivers of restrictive voting legislation, this project explores what factors predict which legislators within states push for these laws. Specifically, I ask whether district-level characteristics predict when lawmakers use bill sponsorship to send messages about their positions beyond those sent by simple roll-call votes. I use theories of geographical threat and racial resentment to predict where sponsorship of these bills is most likely. My results tie these theoretical expectations to observed legislative activity: the whitest state legislative districts in the least-white states were the most likely to be represented by lawmakers who sponsored restrictive bills, as were districts with the most racially resentful white residents. I conclude that, despite lawmakers justifying these restrictive laws by claiming that fraud is a major problem, race and racism are inherently tied to the introduction and passage of these bills. This raises important questions about commitments to multiracial democracy.
一项受限制的权利:种族威胁与限制性选举法的支持
在2020年美国总统大选之后,各州立法机构提出并通过了数量空前的限制性投票法案。虽然过去的研究着眼于州一级限制投票立法的驱动因素,但本项目探讨了哪些因素可以预测哪些州内的立法者推动这些法律。具体来说,我的问题是,地区层面的特征是否可以预测立法者何时使用法案赞助来传递他们的立场信息,而不仅仅是简单的唱名投票。我用地理威胁和种族仇恨理论来预测哪些地方最有可能支持这些法案。我的研究结果将这些理论预期与观察到的立法活动联系起来:在白人最少的州中,白人最多的州立法区最有可能由支持限制性法案的立法者代表,白人居民对种族最不满的地区也是如此。我的结论是,尽管立法者声称欺诈是一个主要问题,为这些限制性法律辩护,但种族和种族主义与这些法案的引入和通过有着内在的联系。这就提出了有关对多种族民主的承诺的重要问题。
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来源期刊
Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics
Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
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