25 Feb 2020
Check out the latest issue of the European Journal of Public Policy (2020, 27, n.1) for the new article, "The public, the protester, and the bill: do legislative agendas respond to public opinion signals?" by Luca Bernardi (University of Liverpool, UK), Daniel Bischof (University of Zürich, Switzerland), and Ruud Wouters (University of Antwerp, Belgium). Download can be found here.
Abstract: Legislators adapt their policies and agendas to public priorities. Yet research on dynamic representation usually focuses on the influence of public opinion through surveys leaving out other public opinion signals. We incorporate mobilization of the public through protest. Combining insights from social movement studies and political science, we expect protest not to have a direct effect on attention change in legislative agendas. If anything protest should have an amplification effect on public priorities. Using a new and unique data set covering collective action, public opinion and legislative agendas across almost 40 years in four Western democracies, we confirm the effect of public opinion through surveys but find no support for a direct effect of protest. Protest rarely moves legislators: only in very specific issues will protest interact with public priorities and affect attention change in legislative agendas. Our results have important implications for policy representation.
Keywords: agenda-setting, policy agendas, protest, public opinion, representation