The Financiers of Congressional Elections: Investors, Ideologues,
and Intimates. By Peter L. Francia, John C. Green, Paul S.
Herrnson, Lynda W. Powell, and Clyde Wilcox. New York: Columbia
University Press, 2003. 205p. $59.50 cloth, $22.50 paper.
This book begins with a simple but important premise: “When
political activists have distinctive views and special access to
policymakers, representation and democracy may become distorted”
(p. 18). Building on previous research showing that such
representational “distortion” is particularly large in the
case of campaign contributors, Peter Francia, John C. Green, Paul S.
Herrnson, Lynda Powell, and Clyde Wilcox collect and analyze an ocean
of new survey data on the characteristics, motives, participation, and
activities of significant donors (those who contributed more than $200
to at least one congressional candidate in 1996). The authors reach the
“troubling” conclusion that significant donors do, in fact,
“have a greater voice both in elections and the policymaking
process than do most other Americans…. The degree to which
donors hold diverse views on policy and possess different motives for
giving serves to mitigate but not eliminate this distortion” (p.
162).