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Government and Policymaking Policymaking • The point at which proposed policy programs (outcomes of interest aggregation) become law. • What does it take for such programs to become policy (make the transition from a proposed course of action to the adopted course of action?) Decision Rules • What are the decision rules across political systems that move interest aggregation to adopted policy? • Constitutions typically contain the decision rules – A set of rules and principles concerning decision making, rights, and the distribution of authority in a political system – Can be written or based in custom, legal precedent – A set of customs and practices Decision Rules • The basic rules governing the decision making process • Creation of offices and assignment of responsibility and authority to these entities • Examples: – U.S. Congress – committee system, two houses with differing rules, rules about reconciliation, etc. – British House of Commons – simple majority rule, cabinet dominance Constitutions • A fundamental political act • Sets out the rules of the game – Functional authority – Geographic distribution of authority • Most political systems have them, notable exception Britain – Highly developed set of customs and conventions supported by ordinary statute – Important role of political culture European Union • Constitutional development has not emerged from crisis • idea for the union originated in effort to prevent future war) • Decision Rules have evolved over the course of 40 years: • Impacts 27 countries • 495.5 million citizens Geographic Distribution of Government Power • Decision rules vary along three dimensions: – Geographic distribution of authority • Federal systems – “separate spheres” of authority • Unitary systems – national authority • Confederal systems –state authority – Separation of powers among branches – Executive • Various names and duties, ceremonial, head of state, head of government, individual or collective – Two forms of representative government: – Presidential and parliamentary – Legislatures • Bicameral, unicameral – Limitations on government authority Democracy vs Authoritarianism • Policy making functions vary most dramatically between these two types of systems • Competitive elections bring people into policy process • Elites dominate the policy making process in authoritarian systems and possibility for non-elite access is low • Democratic transition?? Democratic Presidential Regime • • • • • Two separate agencies of government Executive and legislative, separately elected Branches selected for fixed terms Neither may easily unseat the other Each with specific power in the constitution Parliamentary Regime • Interdependent executive and legislative branches • Only legislature directly elected • Neither branch has a fixed term in office; both (typically) can be voted out of office at any time • Confidence relationship between Cabinet and majority (eliminates divided government) – If majority votes “no confidence” PM and cabinet resign – PM power to dissolve legislature -- elections • Cabinet – collective leadership of the executive branch – derived from the legislature – Chaired by a prime minister, head of government and selects the other members Mixed Systems • • • • Semipresidential President and legislature separately elected But president may dissolve legislature Cabinet may be appointed by president but may be dismissed by legislature • A variety of arrangements for shared control exist – France, Russia Limits on Governmental Power • Provision of civil rights – Protections guaranteed by government – Rights of citizenship • Establishment of courts – Judicial review – judicial limitation of governmental authority – Independent versus non independent • Amending procedures Comparing Structures and Functions • • • • Assemblies Cabinets Elite Recruitment The Bureaucracy – Professionalism – Implementation and enforcement – May also articulate and aggregate and all but form policies • “leave no child behind” – Donna Shalala Children’s Defense Fund