post-election. Following on from this, pluralist scholars hold that Madison envisaged that federal representatives would act as agents for the interests of their constituents, resulting in the institutionalisation of bargaining. For Gibson and others, this interpretation lacks plausibility; Madison wrote before the legitimation of interest group politics, they argue, and the federalists sought to ensure that electoral constituencies would be so large and diverse that federal representatives would be sufficiently detached from one particular interest.
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