Abstract
While existing research establishes that members’ racial identities are associated with legislative priorities, less is known about whether and under what conditions racial diversity within congressional offices shapes legislative agendas. We examine whether Black legislative staff is associated with members’ sponsorship of civil rights legislation and argue that staff composition influences which civil rights proposals reach members’ legislative agendas. We theorize that staff influence operates under institutional constraints: staff composition matters most in discretion-rich civil rights domains, where offices retain greater discretion over agenda construction, and is attenuated in partisan-constrained domains where sponsorship decisions are more tightly integrated into broader party and coalition agendas. Using data linking racial information on House members’ personal office staffs to civil rights bill sponsorship in the 111th–115th Congresses, we find support for both the descriptive-to-substantive link and its conditional operation across domains. Together, these findings show that staff diversity’s implications for lawmaking depend on institutional context, clarifying when descriptive representation translates into substantive representation.
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