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Week 9: Interest Groups in American Politics

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Title: Week 9: Interest Groups in American Politics


1
Week 9 Interest Groups in American Politics
  • James Madison, Federalist Papers
  • The causes of faction are sown in the nature of
    man.
  • Saw the need to limit the negative effects of
    faction by promoting competition among groups
  • Created the concept of checks and balances, the
    conservative governmental system we have
    inherited.

2
Hugo Black, U.S. Senator/Supreme Court Justice
  • Contrary to good morals. The lobby has reached
    such a position of power that it threatens
    government itself. Its size, its power, its
    capacity for evil, its greed, trickery, deception
    and fraud condemn it to the death it deserves. 

3
Arthur Bentley (1910) and David Truman (1950)
  • They saw groups as the heart of politics and
    policy making in a large, complex governmental
    system
  • Truman noted the multiplicity of co-ordinate
    points of access to governmental decisions
  • He concluded, The significance of these many
    points of access and of the complicated texture
    of relationships among them is great.

4
Theodore Lowi
  • Interest group liberal solutions to the problem
    of power provide the system with stability by
    spreading a sense of representation at the
    expense of genuine flexibility, at the expense of
    democratic forms, and ultimately at the expense
    of legitimacy.

5
Loomis/Cigler (1998)
  • Interest group liberalism the proliferation of
    groups and their growing access to government is
    pluralism, but it is sponsored pluralism, and the
    government is the chief sponsor.

6
The Climate for the Group Proliferation
  • Substantial cleavages among the citizenry
  • The Constitution
  • Decentralized political power structure
    (multiple points of access)
  • Decentralized political parties (power vacuum)
  • American value system (individualism/personal
    achievement) 

7
Why have interest groups proliferated?
  • A great rise in the number of interest groups
    since the 1960s
  • Centralization of group headquarters in
    Washington, D.C., rather than in NY or elsewhere
  • Technological developments in information process
    that promote more sophisticated, more timely, and
    more specialized grassroots lobbying
  • The rise of single-issue groups
  • Changes in campaign finance laws (1971,1974) and
    the ensuing growth of the PAC

8
Why have interest groups proliferated?
  • The increased formal penetration of political and
    economic interests in the bureaucracy (advisory
    committees), the presidency (White House group
    representatives), and the Congress (caucuses)
  • The continuing decline of political partiesThe
    increased number, activity, and visibility of
    public-interest groups (Common Cause and Ralph
    Nader-inspired public interest research
    organizations)
  • The growth of activity and impact by
    institutions, including corps, universities,
    state and local government, and foreign
    interests
  • A continuing rise in the amount and
    sophistication of group activity in state
    capitals.

9
Theories of Group Development
  • TrumanThe complex society, characterized by
    economic specialization and social
    differentiation, is fundamental to group
    proliferation.
  • Change some orderly, some not is also key.
  • Technological advancements
  • Social disturbances (war, immigration, etc.) 

10
Theories of Group Development
  • Groups formed from an imbalance of interests in
    one area induce a subsequent disequilibrium,
    which acts as a catalyst for individuals to form
    groups as counterweights to the new perceptions
    of inequity.
  • Group politics is characterized by successive
    waves of mobilization and counter-mobilization.

11
Political Participation and Mobilization Who,
What, When, How and Why
  • While spontaneous popular action warms the heart
    of any good democrat, a moments reflection shows
    that the people initiate little of what we
    normally call participation. Acts of
    participation are stimulated by elites if not
    by the government, then by parties, interest
    groups, agitators, and organizers. (Jack Nagel,
    Participation 1987) 

12
Rosenstone and Hansen (1993)
  • People participate in politics when they get
    valuable benefits that are worth the costs of
    taking part. People participate in politics
    when political leaders coax them into taking part
    in the game.  Both sides are necessary
    Strategic mobilization without individual
    motivation is impossible, and individual
    motivation without strategic mobilization is
    illogical (RH, p. 10)

13
Rosenstone and Hansen (1993)
  • Who participates?
  • People with abundant money, time, skill,
    knowledge and self confidence devote more
    resources to politics
  • For those with limited resources, politics is a
    luxury they often cannot afford, particularly
    when outcomes have only a modest impact on their
    economic situations
  • Those better educated participate more than those
    less educated
  • Those with a sense of political efficacy
    participate more.

14
People participate because they get something out
of it (Olson/Wilson)
  • Collective rewards (everyone benefits, regardless
    of participation)
  • Selective rewards (only participants benefit)
  • Whether a person participates or not depends upon
    their unique set of interests, preferences,
    identifications and beliefs. (RH, p. 17)
  • Their level of participation is dependent,
    however, upon their level of resources available
    to do so.

15
When do they participate?
  • People participate when the benefits outweigh the
    costs of participation.
  • Paradox of Participation in Politics
  • Rational Ignorance
  • If people are rational, and they receive only
    collective benefits from participation in
    politics, they will not participate. Politics is
    irrational.
  • In the same way political learning is likewise
    irrational hence, Rational Ignorance.

16
Important Factor Social Networks
  • They provide information at a lower cost to
    individualsThey provide the ability to
    selectively reward and sanction members.
  • A necessary, but not sufficient, element to
    political action.
  • Others in the system IGs, parties,
    entrepreneurs and activists take advantage of
    this resource in the struggle for political
    advantage.

17
Political Mobilization (RH)
  • Mobilization is the process by which candidates,
    parties, activists, and groups induce other
    people to participate.
  • Two Types of Mobilization
  • Direct
  • Indirect
  • Leaders mobilize people directly when they
    contact citizens personally and encourage them to
    take action.
  • Leaders mobilize people indirectly when they
    contact citizens through mutual associates or
    social networks.

18
Political Mobilization (RH)
  • These social networks particularly formal
    groups reduce costs for everyone involved.
  • Through mobilization, political leaders provide
    information that would otherwise be unavailable
    to citizens and their social networks.
  • They create an opportunity to target those
    citizens already predisposed to participate, and
    they focus political information to those most
    interested at a significantly reduced cost
    (social, financial and psychological).

19
Strategy of Political Mobilization
  • Political activity is costly
  • Citizen participation is but one strategy
    available to political elites
  • Citizen participation is a resource that is used
    selectively in their fights for political
    advantage (RH, p. 30)
  • They target and time their efforts for maximum
    effect.
  • The decisions made by elites determine much of
    who participates, and when they participate.

20
The Collective Action Problem and Group
Mobilization
  • Based on the model of the rational economic man
  • Posits that even individuals who have common
    interests are not inclined to join organizations
    that attempt to address their concerns.

21
The Collective Action Problem and Group
Mobilization (cont)
  • The major barrier The free-rider problem
  • Rational individuals choose not to bear the
    participation costs (time, membership) because
    they can enjoy the group benefits (such as
    favorable legislation) whether or not they join.
  • Groups that pursue collective benefits will have
    a more difficult time forming and surviving.
  • Olsons key selective incentives These
    rewards go only to members of the group
  • Is this an accurate theory of Interest Group
    formation?

22
  The Collective Action Problem and Group
Mobilization (cont)
  • Other ideas
  • People are more likely to support interest groups
    if they object of collective action is the
    prevention of a collective bad rather than the
    creation of another collective good (Hansen,
    1985)
  • Collective action is more likely in a repetitive
    scenario (Walker, p. 47)

23
Origins and Maintenance of Groups
  • Many factors contributed to the origination of
    groups
  • Apart from incentives, the role of patrons is
    critical to the growth and development of the
    interest group system.
  • I.e. SDS
  • Walker argues that the growth is a product of
    finding alternative sources of revenue outside
    membership (patrons, donors, etc.)
  • The energy that drives the process of group
    formation may come from below or above.

24
Group StrategiesTwo Choices Inside and Outside
  • Four factors influence the choice of political
    strategies by interest groups
  • The degree of conflict in the political
    environment
  • Internal organizational resources
  • Character of their memberships
  • The principal sources of their financial support.

25
 Walkers findings
  • Interest groups tend to choose strategies that
    are compatible with their organizational form
  • Groups that are decentralized are likely to
    increase their use of outside strategies
  • Groups with members from the profit or mixed
    sectors show little tendency to adopt outside
    strategies under any circumstances
  • Citizen groups or those with members from the
    nonprofit sector are much more likely to respond
    to conflict with outside strategies
  • The presence of patrons has a dampening effect on
    the choice of outside strategies.

26
The Three Modes of Political Mobilization
  • The association based upon a tightly knit
    commercial or occupational community in the
    profit sector whose members share a concern for
    protecting or advancing their economic interests.
  • Also based upon occupational communities, but
    entrepreneurs serve to make strong appeals on the
    behalf of the membership. The role of government
    sponsorship is high.
  • Groups founded upon the commitment of individuals
    attracted by a cause, along with a package of
    financial contributions and other forms of
    patronage from foundations, wealthy individuals,
    churches, and other institutions. Strongly
    non-profit in nature.

27
 Final Thoughts
  • Political mobilization is seldom spontaneous
  •  The essential prerequisites for successful
    mobilization are organizational, and many are
    subject to manipulation through public policy.
    (Reagan policy to defund the left)

28
Final Thoughts
  • The reason why some of the most deprived
    elements of American society are either ignored
    or represented in the legislative process only by
    small, nonmember organizations is not that they
    are satisfied with their status and have no
    interest in political activity it is because
    there is no institutional foundation from which a
    successful effort at mobilization can be
    launched.
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