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Where politics is dominated by two large parties, as in the United
States, politicians should be relatively immune to the influence of
small groups. Yet narrow interest groups often win private benefits
against majority preferences and at great public expense. Why? The
"vulnerability thesis" is that the electoral system is largely to
blame, making politicians in two-party systems more vulnerable to
interest group demands than politicians in multiparty systems.
Political scientist Lorelei Moosbrugger ranks democracies on a
continuum of political vulnerability and tests the thesis by
examining agrochemical policy in Austria, Britain, Germany, Sweden,
and the European Union.
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