Peer Reviewed Article

Race, Responsiveness, and Representation in U.S. Lawmaking

Authors
  • Jacob S. Hacker
  • Zoltan Hajnal
  • Mackenzie Lockhart
  • G. Agustin Markarian
Published
November 12, 2025
Publication
American Political Science Review
Discipline
Areas of Study
Geographic Areas
Document Control Number(s)
  • ISPS 25-64
Citation

MARKARIAN GA, HACKER JS, LOCKHART M, HAJNAL Z. Race, Responsiveness, and Representation in U.S. Lawmaking. American Political Science Review. Published online 2025:1-25. doi:10.1017/S0003055425101287

Abstract

Is national policy more responsive to the preferences of white Americans than to those of people of color? To answer this fundamental question, we examine how well federal lawmaking reflects the preferences of 520,000 Black, Latino, Asian American, and white citizens from 2006 to 2022. Average racial gaps in responsiveness are small regardless of issue area. However, white voters are significantly advantaged when Republicans control the government. Respondents’ class, age, and ideology cannot explain this disparity. Respondents’ partisanship explains some, but not all, of it. To further investigate, we analyze roll call votes in Congress, focusing on the Senate—the pivotal lawmaking institution. Similar patterns emerge: Republican Senators better represent white (versus Black or Latino) constituents. Moreover, Black-white disparities are larger in states where Black Americans comprise more of the population. This suggests a role for white racial attitudes, and, indeed, we find that state-level white racial resentment predicts Black-white representational disparities.

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Related Data:

Research documentation and data that support the findings of this study are openly available at the American Political Science Review Dataverse: https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/ZJ1I0V.