Deployed to the Hill: Military Experience and Legislative Behavior in Congress

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Authors

Amoroso, Joseph G.

Issue Date

2024-11-15

Type

journal-article

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Keywords

congress , legislative behavior , legislative effectiveness , bipartisanship , Veterans , Civil-Military Relations

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Abstract

Congress is more polarized than ever. At the same time, there are fewer military veterans serving in Congress than ever before. Candidates with military experience, along with their supporters, argue that electing more veterans could help reduce dysfunction and gridlock. They claim that military values, such as duty and teamwork, translate into differences in legislative behavior. But are veteran lawmakers more effective than those without military experience? Are they more bipartisan? Using House data from the 104th to 116th Congresses (1995–2021), I examine the extent to which military experience influences a lawmaker’s ability to legislate and engage in bipartisan behavior. I find that veteran lawmakers are more effective at advancing consequential legislation. Additionally, veterans appear more willing to collaborate with members of the opposite party, especially in recent Congresses. These effects are particularly evident among those who served on active duty. I conclude by considering the implications of these findings for maintaining healthy civil-military relations in America.

Description

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/10659129241298960

Citation

Amoroso, J. G. (2024). Deployed to the Hill: Military Experience and Legislative Behavior in Congress. Political Research Quarterly, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/10659129241298960

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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DOI

ISSN

1065-9129
1938-274X

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