Affiliation:
1. Edward A. Clark Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies The University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
2. Department of Government The University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
Abstract
AbstractIn Westminster systems, governments enjoy a privileged position in the lawmaking process that they can use to deliver on their campaign promises and achieve their policy goals. What policy areas do governments seek to affect through lawmaking? How stable is the executive lawmaking agenda? How responsive is that agenda to changes triggered by elections or by transitions in prime minister? This study uses a dataset of 3982 Australian bills introduced between 2000 and 2017 to answer these questions. While it finds considerable stability in the policy content of executive lawmaking agendas, the analysis also indicates that Australia's executive lawmaking agenda is more responsive to changes in prime minister than to changes in the party in power. As the first application of the comparative policy agendas approaches to government bills in Australia, this article offers new insights into executive lawmaking priorities during an especially turbulent period in Australian politics.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
1 articles.
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