Congress: The Electoral Connection is a book by David Mayhew, first published in 1974, that applies rational choice theory to the actions of American Congressmen. Mayhew argues that Congressmen are motivated by re-election. [1]
Mayhew uses pieces from Anthony Downs's and Richard Fenno's works to build his own argument and present his own rational choice model for members of Congress.
Mayhew claims that the book is theoretical; it pursues an argument and considers the implications for exploratory purposes. [2]
Mayhew's model rests on the assumption that all members of congress are single-minded seekers of reelection. He references the decreasing turnover rate of congressmen as evidence for the transition to full-time politicians interested in advancing their careers. It is also the goal that must be reached in order for any other goals (legislation) to be achieved.
Whereas the British system (GB) is adept at producing candidates representative of their party, the American system (US) produces more individualized candidates, candidates who may or may not reflect local interests more than their parties' national stances.
Questions introduced in Section 1: the Electoral Incentive
Other Points
The goal of this part of Mayhew's work is to show what happens when members who need to engage in these activities assemble for collective action. [6]
Congress is made up of single-minded seekers of reelection. This mindset affects how they gather support, interact with interest groups, make policy, virtually everything within Congress and on Capitol Hill. [7]
To claim credit for something that benefits constituents
Politicians get "reward for taking positions rather than achieving effects" [8]
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See also: Richard Fenno (1973).
"What a congressman has to do is to insure that in primary and general elections the resource balance (with all other deployed resources finally translated into votes) favors himself rather than somebody else" [1]