Abstract

This study seeks to reveal why the U.S. House Democrats showed different levels of support in the voting of the U.S.-Morocco FTA, U.S.-Bahrain FTA, and U.S.-Oman FTA. Existing studies focusing on the constituency or members’ ideology do not properly account for the variance of these three FTA voting results. All of these FTAs, however, were promoted as a part of the president’s foreign policies. If so, FTA support in Congress could depend on representatives’ evaluation of the presidential foreign policy. Based on this, the study analyzes how representatives’ evaluation of President Bush’s foreign policy changed according to the period of the three FTA votes. The vote on the FTAs has been influenced by their evaluation of the presidential foreign and national security policies.

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