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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 17, 2026

Novel Object Recognition and Object Location Behavioral Testing in Mice on a Budget
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Nominations for Sale.

Silvia Console-Battilana1, Kenneth A Shepsle

  • 1Visiting Professor, IGIER, Bocconi University.

Journal of Theoretical Politics
|December 17, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Presidential and lobbyist contributions can overcome Senate gridlock on nominations. This research models how financial incentives influence senators

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Area of Science:

  • Political Science
  • Game Theory
  • American Politics

Background:

  • US Senate confirmations often face gridlock due to super-majority requirements.
  • Empirical evidence shows nominations are frequently successful despite theoretical gridlock.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore how financial contributions from the president and lobbyists can resolve nomination gridlock.
  • To model the strategic incentives influencing senators' voting behavior.

Main Methods:

  • Game-theoretic modeling of nomination politics.
  • Analysis of contribution schemes: conditional on voting profile, individual vote, or outcome.
  • Examination of indirect lobbying strategies targeting presidential proposal behavior.

Main Results:

  • Financial inducements can alter senators' voting preferences, leading to nominee confirmation.
  • The structure of payment schedules (e.g., outcome-contingent) impacts the effectiveness of contributions.
  • Lobbyists may strategically influence the president rather than directly lobbying senators.

Conclusions:

  • Nomination gridlock is not an inevitable equilibrium.
  • Financial incentives play a crucial role in overcoming legislative hurdles in US presidential nominations.
  • Understanding these incentive structures is key to analyzing political outcomes.