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9780534560232

New Party Politics From Jefferson and Hamilton to the Information Age

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780534560232

  • ISBN10:

    0534560237

  • Edition: 2nd
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2003-06-23
  • Publisher: Cengage Learning

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Summary

The authors of this fresh text on American political parties employ an engaging writing style, a strong historical foundation, and a new analogy for understanding party systems in a compelling textbook. White and Shea trace the evolution of parties from the late 18th century through the Information Age, examining the impact of new information technologies throughout the text.

Author Biography

John Kenneth White (Ph.D., University of Connecticut, 1980) is professor of politics at the Catholic University of America Daniel M. Shea (Ph.D., State University of New York at Albany, 1993) is associate professor of political science at Allegheny College

Table of Contents

PREFACE xiii
ABOUT THE AUTHORS xvi
INTRODUCTION: RETHINKING POLITICAL PARTIES IN THE INFORMATION AGE 1(15)
Notes
13(3)
1 POLITICAL PARTIES IN AN AMERICAN SETTING 16(23)
Political Parties: Institutions Americans Love to Hate
17(4)
Comparatively Speaking: Political Party Development in a Comparative Setting
18(3)
Praise from the Ivory Tower
21(1)
Politics without Parties
22(1)
The Parties Speak: Gejdenson versus White on the Importance of Political Parties
23(1)
Three Important Party Distinctions
23(1)
How Parties Differ from Other Organizations
24(1)
The Components of American Political Parties
25(1)
Does the Tripod Work in the Information Age?
26(3)
What Do Political Parties Seek to Accomplish?
29(3)
The Battle of the Titans: Hamilton versus Jefferson
32(4)
Like God, Parties Are Not Dead
36(1)
Further Reading
36(1)
Notes
37(2)
2 THE ASCENDANCE OF PARTY POLITICS 39(25)
The Pre-Party Era
40(1)
The Colonial Experience
40(5)
Comparatively Speaking: Comparing Representation and the Bases for Party Competition
43(2)
Nascent Parties: Federalists versus Republicans
45(4)
Party Rule: 1824-1912
49(2)
Breakdown and Renewal: The Election of 1824
51(1)
The Jackson-Van Buren Alliance
52(1)
The Rise of Mass-Based Politics and the Emergence of the Spoils System
53(2)
The Interregnum: Parties and the Civil War
55(2)
The Coming of the Machine
57(4)
The Parties Speak: A Day in the Life of Party Boss George Washington Plunkitt
59(1)
The Parties Speak: Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard J. Daley on Patronage
60(1)
Parties "American Style"
61(1)
Further Reading
62(1)
Notes
62(2)
3 THE DECLINE OF PARTY POLITICS 64(37)
Comparatively Speaking: Dealignment and Party Decline in Different Settings
66(2)
"Clean It Up!": The Progressive Movement
68(1)
Enter the Progressives
69(10)
The Parties Speak: Robert M. LaFollette, Sr. "The Menace of the Machine" (1897)
73(6)
Why the Progressive Movement Was Successful
79(3)
An End to Party Politics?
82(2)
Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal
84(1)
The New Deal and Party Politics
85(1)
Political Parties and the Cold War
86(2)
The Rise of Interest Groups
88(1)
The Interest Group Explosion
89(2)
The Rise of Candidate-Centered Politics
91(1)
Party Activist versus Professional Consultant
91(2)
The Parties Speak: Ed Rollins and the "Campaign from Hell"
92(1)
Party Member versus Nonpartisan Candidate
93(1)
Party Affiliation versus Voting Choice
94(1)
A Partyless Age?
94(4)
The Parties Speak: "Mr. Mayor, You Could Have Used a Machine"
95(3)
Further Reading
98(1)
Notes
99(2)
4 PARTY ORGANIZATIONS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY 101(27)
Comparatively Speaking: The Greens and Party (Dis)Organization
103(2)
Organizational Adjustment and Growth
105(1)
The Rebirth of the Republican National Committee
106(2)
The Democratic National Committee Plays Catch-Up
108(1)
New Technologies in the Information Age
109(2)
Summary
111(1)
The Emergence of Legislative Campaign Committees
112(1)
The Hill Committees
113(2)
State Legislative Campaign Committees
115(3)
The Parties Speak: Congressman David Price on the Role of Party in Campaigns
116(2)
Wither the Local Parties?
118(1)
Evidence of Local Party Renewal
118(4)
The Parties Speak: Party Leaders Voice Concerns about Legislative Campaign Committees
119(3)
Evidence of Local Party Decline
122(1)
Revivalists versus Declinists
122(3)
Conclusion
125(1)
Further Reading
125(1)
Notes
126(2)
5 NOMINATING PRESIDENTS IN THE INFORMATION AGE 128(37)
What Kind of President?
129(5)
From John Adams to George W. Bush: The Problem of Presidential Selection
134(8)
The Parties Speak: Alexander Hamilton on Choosing an American President
135(3)
The Parties Speak: Politics Drowns in a Sea of Reforms
138(2)
Comparatively Speaking: Nominating Candidates: Contrasting U.S. Democrats with German Social Democrats
140(2)
Hamilton's Family versus Jefferson's Community
142(1)
The King-Making Caucuses
142(1)
Enter the Party Conventions
142(3)
The Rise of Haeliltonian Nationalism
145(1)
The McGovern-Fraser Commission
146(7)
The Parties Speak: Newsweek's Evan Thomas Reflects on Robert F. Kennedy's Life and Legacy
148(5)
Are Primaries and Caucuses Representative?
153(1)
Republicans Follow the McGovern-Fraser Lead
154(3)
The Unintended Consequences of the McGovern-Fraser Reforms
157(1)
The Mikulski and Winograd Commissions
158(1)
Enter the Superdelegates
159(1)
Looking to 2004
160(2)
Further Reading
162(1)
Notes
163(2)
6 PARTY BRAND LOYALTY AND THE AMERICAN VOTER 165(37)
Comparatively Speaking: Party Identification-Is There Brand Loyalty Elsewhere?
167(3)
The Importance of Party Identification
170(3)
Measuring Party Identification
173(2)
Is Party Identification Obsolete?
175(1)
The Making of an Idea: Party Realignment
175(1)
V.O. Key and Party Realignment
176(4)
The Parties Speak: V.O. Key and the Theory of Party Realignment
177(3)
Party Realignment: The Death of a Concept?
180(5)
The Parties Speak: Everett C. Ladd, "Like Waiting for Godot, the Uselessness of Party Realignment"
184(1)
Where Are the Voters Going?
185(1)
The End of the New Deal Coalition
186(1)
Here Come the Ticket-Splitters
186(2)
Party Coalitions during the George W. Bush Era
188(2)
The Gender Gap
190(4)
Divided Government
194(3)
What's Left for the Parties?
197(1)
Further Reading
198(1)
Notes
198(4)
7 STATE AND LOCAL PARTIES: "MOM AND POP" SHOPS IN THE INFORMATION AGE 202(36)
State and Local Parties in the Information Age
204(1)
Regulating State Parties
204(1)
Party Structure
205(6)
Comparatively Speaking: Regionalism and Political Parties
206(5)
A Network of Allied Party Groups
211(2)
Who Belongs?
213(1)
Primary Voters
214(2)
The Blanket Primary Controversy
216(3)
Officials in the Party Organization
219(2)
Activists
221(1)
Summary
221(1)
Local Political Culture
221(4)
The Parties Speak: The "Amateur Democrats"
224(1)
What State and Local Parties Do
225(1)
Manifest Party Functions
225(2)
State Parties in Legislative Campaigns
227(2)
State and Local Parties, Computers, and the Internet
229(1)
Desktop Tools
229(1)
State Parties on the Internet
229(1)
Computers and Money to the Rescue?
230(4)
Appendix: Democratic and Republican State Committee Web Sites, Spring 2003
234(1)
Further Reading
235(1)
Notes
235(3)
8 CAMPAIGN FINANCE AND INFORMATION AGE POLITICAL PARTIES 238(40)
A Brief Look at Money in Elections
240(1)
Phase 1: Money as a Supplement to Party Activities (1790's to 1880's)
240(1)
Phase 2: The Rise of Corporate Politics (1880's to 1950's)
241(2)
Phase 3: Media-Centered Elections (1960's to the Present)
243(3)
Comparatively Speaking: Comparative Campaign Finance
245(1)
Efforts to Regulate the Flow of Money in Elections
246(2)
Meaningful Reform: Watergate and Federal Reforms
248(2)
A Challenge in the Courts: Buckley v. Valeo
250(2)
The Rise of PACs
252(2)
Creative Party Finances in the Information Age
254(3)
The Parties Speak: Buying Loyalty: Bill Frist Has Relied on Money as Much as Charm to Make Political Friends
256(1)
Issue Advocacy
257(1)
Independent Expenditures
258(2)
Hard and Soft Money
260(2)
Transfers to State Party Committees
262(1)
McCain and Feingold Have Their Day: Reforming the Reforms
263(11)
The Parties Speak: The Debate on Campaign Finance Reform
265(9)
The Future of Party Finance in America
274(1)
Further Reading
275(1)
Notes
276(2)
9 ELECTED OFFICIALS: THE RELUCTANT SALES FORCE OF THE PARTY SYSTEM 278(27)
The Parties Speak: The 1994 House Republicans' Contract with America
280(1)
The President as Party Leader
281(2)
The Party in Congress
283(8)
Comparatively Speaking: From Elections to Governing: Government Coalition Formation
286(3)
The Parties Speak: Toward a More Responsible Two-Party System
289(2)
The Contract with America
291(6)
The Parties Speak: Constance Morella on the Rise of Partisanship in the House of Representatives
296(1)
The Rise of the Public Speakership
297(2)
Congress and the "Little Arts of Popularity"
299(4)
Further Reading
303(1)
Notes
303(2)
10 THIRD PARTIES AND THE INFORMATION AGE: THE ORPHANS OF AMERICAN POLITICS 305(47)
The Third-Party Paradox
308(4)
Comparatively Speaking: Does Minor Party Success Elsewhere Suggest Third-Party Success Here?
310(2)
Institutional Barriers
312(6)
American Political Culture
318(3)
The Momentum of History
321(4)
The Parties Speak: Benjamin C. Bubar, 1976 and 1980 Prohibition Party Presidential Nominee
323(2)
Significant Third Parties in American History
325(1)
The Anti-Mason Party
326(1)
The Free-Soil Party
326(1)
The American (Know-Nothing) Party
327(1)
The Greenback and Populists (People's) Parties
328(2)
The Progressives: 1912-1924
330(2)
The Parties Speak: William Jennings Bryan's "Cross of Gold" Speech Presented to the Democratic National Convention, Chicago, Illinois, July 8, 1896
331(1)
Henry Wallace and the Progressive Party of 1948
332(2)
State's Rights Party (1948) and the American Independent Party (1968)
334(1)
The Reform Party
335(1)
The Green Party
336(3)
The Parties Speak: A Conversation between Ralph Nader and The American Prospect Magazine Editor Robert Kuttner
337(2)
Third Parties in the Information Age
339(1)
An Explosion of Minor Parties
339(2)
Changes in Voter Attitudes toward Minor Parties
341(2)
Minor Parties and the Internet
343(2)
Jefferson, Hamilton, and the Future of Third Parties in America
345(3)
The Parties Speak: Ventura Win Marks Dawn of New Era: Age of Digital Politics
346(2)
Further Reading
348(1)
Notes
348(4)
CONCLUSION: HAMILTON'S TRIUMPH AND THE ADVENT OF THE "BASE-LESS" PARTY SYSTEM 352(17)
The 2002 Election and the "Base-Less" Party System
357(4)
Comparatively Speaking: Conclusion
361(3)
Party Politics in the Twenty-First Century
364(1)
Voter Trends
364(1)
Organizational Developments
364(1)
Legislative Politics
365(1)
New Laws
365(1)
Minor Parties
365(1)
Notes
366(3)
INDEX 369

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