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Political Parties

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Title: Political Parties


1
Political Parties
  • Chapter Twelve

2
Introduction
  • Do parties matter to voters?
  • In 2000, the same electorate that seemed so
    indifferent to parties cast the most consistent
    party-line vote for president recorded in nearly
    half a century.
  • Polls found huge differences between Bush and
    Gore supporters on a variety of issues.
  • The 2000 election was very partisan.
  • Many voters, while expressing negative opinions
    about political parties, BEHAVE as partisans.

3
The Constitutions Unwanted Offspring
  • The Constitution contains no mention of political
    parties.
  • During the nations founding, parties were widely
    considered to be a threat to good government and
    public order.

4
The Constitutions Unwanted Offspring
  • The pervasive fear of parties reflected both
    historical experience and widely held
    eighteenth-century social beliefs.
  • Factional conflict brought to mind the bloody
    religious wars of Europe and internal strife that
    had destroyed the classic republics of Greece,
    Rome, and Italy.
  • Those in power saw themselves as acting for the
    benefit of society. An opposition was misguided
    at best, treacherous at worst.

5
The Constitutions Unwanted Offspring
  • When the leaders of the new government took the
    steps that led to the creation of the first
    political parties, they did not expect or want
    party competition to be a permanent feature of
    American politics.

6
The Constitutions Unwanted Offspring
  • Parties were meant to be temporary expedients to
    achieve collective action goals that were
    difficult to achieve without them.
  • The Constitution, while not vocal on parties
    specifically, did have a profound effect on the
    kind of parties that developed.

7
Incentives for Party Building
  • In a system where collective choices are made by
    voting, organization pays.
  • When action requires winning majorities on a
    continuing basis in multiple settings,
    organization is absolutely essential.
  • The Constitutions provisions for enacting laws
    and electing leaders, therefore, put a huge
    premium on building majority alliances across
    institutions and electoral units.

8
To Build Stable Legislative and Electoral
Alliances
  • The first American parties appeared in Congress
    when leaders with opposing visions of the
    national future began competing for legislative
    votes.
  • In order to win, they had to obtain majority
    support for their side, arrange a common course
    of action, and then get the supporters to show up
    to vote.
  • Parties must also build alliances across
    institutional boundaries incorporating the
    presidency as well as members of the House and
    Senate. Why?

9
To Build Stable Legislative and Electoral
Alliances
  • Organized competition for votes in Congress leads
    directly to organized competition for votes in
    congressional elections.
  • The organizational work required to negotiate and
    maintain electoral alliances expands legislative
    parties into electoral parties.

10
To Build Stable Legislative and Electoral
Alliances
  • The presidential selection rules also offer
    powerful incentives for building electoral
    alliances across districts and states.
  • How so?
  • Because of the nature of the constitutional
    system and its incentives, the organizational
    work required for the collective pursuit of
    political office results in a national party
    organization.

11
To Mobilize Voters
  • No matter how well organized, electoral alliances
    fail if they cannot get enough people to vote for
    their candidates.
  • Parties are motivated to attract voters and get
    them to the polls.

12
To Mobilize Voters
  • Initially, suffrage was restricted. Those who
    could vote made their preferences known orally
    and in public, a practice that encouraged
    deference to the local gentry.
  • Elections were contests between individuals
    backed by personal followers.
  • Politics was unseemly. Campaigns were conducted
    on the sly.
  • As suffrage expanded and the egalitarian spirit
    of the frontier gradually dominated the habits of
    deference, party organizations emerged to court
    the voters openly.

13
To Develop New Electoral Techniques
  • Once parties organized their efforts to win
    elections, they initiated new relationships
    between voters and elected leaders.
  • Politics was not simply local a larger, more
    dispersed electorate had to be reached.
  • Parties turned to mass communication newspapers,
    pamphlets, public letters, and printed speeches.
  • These were designed to excite voters emotionally
    so that they would be motivated to vote and avoid
    the free-rider problem.

14
To Use Party Labels and Enforce Collective
Responsibility
  • Voters need a way to distinguish among candidates
    for office.
  • Party labels offer a shorthand cue that keeps
    voting decisions cheap and simple (as long as the
    labels are informative).
  • The more accurately a candidates label predicts
    behavior in office, the more useful it is to
    voters, and the more it will continue to be used.

15
To Use Party Labels and Enforce Collective
Responsibility
  • Once candidates have adopted a party label,
    politicians have a personal stake in maintaining
    the value of their partys brand name.
  • This may require them to put aside some of their
    views or ambitions for the good of the party.
  • The threat of collective punishment gives the
    majority party a strong incentive to govern in
    ways that please voters.

16
To Use Party Labels and Enforce Collective
Responsibility
  • Parties, then, developed into three-part systems
    connecting
  • 1) the party in government, an alliance of
    current officeholders cooperating to shape public
    policy
  • 2) the party organization, dedicated to electing
    the partys candidates and
  • 3) the party in the electorate, composed of those
    voters who identify with the party and regularly
    vote for its nominees.

17
Basic Features of the Party System
  • Parties developed because the institutional
    structures and processes established by the
    Constitution made them too useful to forgo.
  • As they formed, they changed, but a number of
    basic features remained throughout.
  • Two-party competition.
  • Decentralized, fragmented, party coalitions.
  • Professional politicians.

18
Two-Party Competition
  • During the first few Congresses, national leaders
    gradually divided into two major camps.
  • This division initiated a two-party competition
    that has basically continued to this day.

19
Two-Party Competition
  • While Americans think of the two-party system as
    the norm, most modern democracies have more than
    two parties.
  • Our system, with elections in which only a single
    winner is chosen by plurality vote, generally
    reduced competition to two because people tend to
    vote strategically.
  • Duvergers law when your candidate has no chance
    to win, you turn to the less objectionable of the
    major party candidates who can win. Encourages
    two-party competition.

20
Two-Party Competition
  • Because of this, most office seekers join one of
    the two competitive parties, rather than pursue
    office as independents or third-party nominees.
  • When independent/third parties arise, their
    popular aspects are copied by the major parties.
  • Major parties, with incentives to expand their
    electoral coalitions, help maintain the two-party
    system.
  • Elections in U.S. have generally been
    winner-take-all rules work to reduce options to
    two.

21
Two-Party Competition
  • An alternative to the American system is one
    based on proportional representation.
  • Here a party receives legislative seats in
    proportion to its share of votes.
  • The system helps to preserve smaller parties,
    because votes for their candidates are not
    wasted, but it has never been tried in the United
    States on any significant scale.
  • Once a two-party system was established, both
    parties had a stake in preserving the electoral
    rules that got them elected.
  • What kinds of hurdles did they erect?

22
Decentralized, Fragmented, Party Coalitions
  • Federalism fragments the political system and
    thus promotes two-partyism.
  • Historically, national parties have been
    assembled from diverse state and local political
    factions concerned chiefly with the politics of
    their cities, counties, and states.
  • Thus, they can work together to elect national
    leaders, but go their own way on matters closer
    to home.
  • Since the beginning, the major parties have been
    diverse, unwieldy coalitions that required much
    maintenance to stay united.

23
Professional Politicians
  • At the time the Constitution was adopted,
    political leadership was the job of successful
    and prominent men who valued public service.

24
Professional Politicians
  • The variety and frequency of elections generated
    by the multi-layered federal system made party
    management a full-time job for many.
  • Tools were born to attract resources and reward
    the efforts of party workers. One of these was
    patronage -- the use of government jobs,
    contracts, and so on as political rewards.
  • This system was largely destroyed with the
    reforms of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

25
The Development and Evolution of the Party System
  • Parties have been shaped by politicians
    strategic behaviors as they react to
    opportunities and challenges posed by the
    Constitution.
  • Scholars have identified a sequence of five
    (possibly six) distinct historical party systems.

26
The Development and Evolution of the Party System
  • First party system (1790-1824) creation of
    national parties.
  • Second party system (1824-1860) basic
    organizational structures set.
  • Third party system (1860-1894) rise of party
    machines.
  • Fourth party system (1894-1932) fall of party
    machines.
  • Fifth party system (1932-?) pattern of
    coalitional nature of American parties clearly
    illustrated.

27
The First Party System The Origin of American
Parties
  • The American party system was born in the first
    few Congresses as leaders with opposing views on
    national issues fought to prevail.
  • The conflict involved two opposing factions
  • the Hamilton faction, which promoted commercial
    and manufacturing interests following the British
    economic model,
  • and the Jefferson and Madison faction, which
    sought to protect the interests of farmers,
    tradesman, and agrarian states in general, and
    supported diplomatic relations with France.

28
The First Party System The Origin of American
Parties
  • Hamiltons efforts to win votes for his policies
    caused him to caucus members of Congress, try to
    influence the legislative schedule, and so on,
    much like a modern floor leader.
  • Those who agreed with his plan coalesced around
    his leadership.

29
The First Party System The Origin of American
Parties
  • The Hamilton coalition was labeled Federalists,
    which derived from members earlier support of
    the Constitution and their endorsement of a
    strong national government.
  • Members who were opposed to Hamiltons policies
    gradually coalesced under the leadership of
    Jefferson and Madison.

30
The First Party System The Origin of American
Parties
  • Protesting the alleged aristocratic pretensions
    of the Federalists, they styled themselves
    Republicans.
  • Later, the Jeffersonian Republicans would become
    the Democratic Party (1820s), now the oldest
    political party in the world.

31
The First Party System The Origin of American
Parties
  • The Federalists prevailed early in the battle.
    Hamilton convinced members of Congress to support
    his policies.
  • John Adams, a Federalist, succeeded Washington as
    president.

32
The First Party System The Origin of American
Parties
  • In 1800 Jefferson challenged Adams for the
    presidency, but his faction of Republicans also
    recruited candidates for state and local offices
    across the states.
  • This alliance of state office holders gave him
    the ability to remove the Federalists and their
    influence from the White House and Congress.
  • Moreover, the Federalists had given them ample
    ammunition with the Alien and Sedition Act, as
    well as other policies and the performance of
    government in general.

33
The First Party System The Origin of American
Parties
  • Democratic-Republicans found new ways to move
    from the out party to the in party.
  • The losers then imitated successful innovations.
    Federalists tried, but could not change their
    ways.
  • These parties were loose collections of
    provincial interests -- unstable coalitions.
  • When their pro-British leanings put them on the
    wrong side of the War of 1812, the Federalists
    faded as a national force.

34
The Second Party System Organizational Innovation
  • By the second decade of the nineteenth century
    the Democratic-Republicans had eclipsed the
    Federalists nearly everywhere.
  • James Monroe (pictured) crushed their last
    nominee (Rufus King) in 1816.

35
The Second Party System Organizational Innovation
  • Monroe was reelected with no competition four
    years later.
  • There was so little party conflict, the time was
    called the Era of Good Feelings.
  • But that did not mean there was no political
    conflict. There was.
  • It simply took place within one party rather than
    between two.

36
The Second Party System Organizational Innovation
  • Without electoral opposition, party networks fell
    apart and political participation dropped
    significantly.
  • However, competition was again seen in the
    presidential election of 1824.

37
The Second Party System Organizational Innovation
  • During this time period, presidents were
    nominated by congressional caucus (members
    assembled with their allies to make party
    decisions).
  • With the Federalists gone, almost everyone in
    Congress was a Democratic-Republican. However,
    these members did not always reach consensus.
  • In 1824 no fewer than five serious candidates
    sought the presidency.

38
The Second Party System Organizational Innovation
  • The congressional caucus nominee, William
    Crawford, came in last, whereas Andrew Jackson
    came in first in popular and electoral votes, but
    had no majority in either.
  • John Quincy Adams came in second to Jackson.
    House Speaker Henry Clay was third, and John C.
    Calhoun withdrew early.
  • Because no candidate had a majority, the election
    was thrown to the House of Representatives.

39
The Second Party System Organizational Innovation
  • Clay threw his support and that of his coalition
    to Adams. Adams promised to make him Secretary of
    State (then the stepping stone to the
    presidency).
  • Jacksons supporters were outraged at the
    corrupt bargain.
  • With the help of Martin Van Buren, Jackson was
    able to win the presidency under a new Democratic
    party in 1828.

40
The Second Party System Organizational Innovation
  • Van Buren utilized communications of all kinds to
    build the Jackson network, particularly
    newspapers.
  • He utilized the concept of a club and created
    Jackson clubs across the country.
  • Supporters of Adams had no choice but to put
    together a network of their own.
  • Adams did not like parties and campaigned little,
    but simply standing for reelection brought a
    national party into being.

41
The Creation of the National Convention
  • Jackson won in 1828, and upon his campaigning for
    his second term (1832), a new innovation was
    introduced to party politics -- the national
    party convention.
  • It was promoted as a more democratic alternative
    to the discredited congressional caucus, allowing
    for more popular participation in the nomination
    process.

42
The Creation of the National Convention
  • It served the purpose of solving problems of
    conflict and coordination by
  • Assembling the national party coalition,
  • Providing a forum for the politicking that helped
    create a unified presidential ticket.
  • Serving as a giant pep rally that got the troops
    ready for electoral battle.

43
The Creation of the National Convention
  • Jacksons strong presidency and personality
    generated some opposition.
  • In 1836 when Van Buren was nominated by the
    Democratic convention as their candidate,
    opponents (the Whig party) chose their own
    candidates (three of them).
  • The Whig party name had come to symbolize
    opposition to royal (King Andrew) tyranny.

44
The Creation of the National Convention
  • The Whigs lost, but came back the following year
    with a popular war hero who was able to beat a
    beleagured incumbent Van Buren.
  • By 1840, the Whigs and Democrats were organized
    in every state, competing not only for the
    presidency but state and local elections as well.
  • The two-party competition for president framed
    competition for offices at all levels of
    government.
  • Participation in the hoopla surrounding the
    presidential contest bred strong feelings of
    party loyalty among many voters.

45
The Spoils System
  • Parties on the rise always attract opportunists.
  • Most people who join a partys effort do so for
    some benefit. Perhaps political office in the
    future or some other favor.
  • During this time period, the most sought after
    reward was a government job, government contract,
    or some special project they could gain material
    riches from.
  • The pursuit of spoils intensified party
    competition and put a heavy premium on winning.

46
The Spoils System
  • Spoils made parties work harder to expand their
    coalition -- supporting efforts to expand the
    franchise and to bring immigrants into the
    political process.
  • It also increased corruption -- the willingness
    for parties to overlook real problems (like
    slavery and other divisive issues) in order not
    to upset the delicate balance of their electoral
    coalitions.
  • Principled conflict is often a threat to party
    coalitions.

47
The Third Party System Entrepreneurial Politics
  • The Republican Party, organized in 1854 as a
    coalition of forces -- many of them anti-slavery
    -- serves as one example of a successful
    challenge to the two-party system.
  • Third parties have generally failed to attract
    enough of a following to become more than obscure
    refuges for the disaffected.
  • Some, however, have shaken the political system.
  • Anti-Masonic and American parties both had
    lasting effects on the character of the major
    parties of their time (pre-Civil War era).

48
The Republican Party
  • The Republican Party was organized in opposition
    to the Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854), which
    overturned limits on the extension of slavery to
    the territories enacted earlier in the Missouri
    Compromise of 1820 and the Compromise of 1850.
  • It drew its members from anti-slavery parties,
    the Know Nothings, anti-slavery Whigs, and
    dissident Democrats who did not tolerate their
    partys position on slavery.

49
The Republican Party
  • Their name was meant to connect them to
    Jeffersonian Republicans and the National
    Republicans who had organized briefly and
    unsuccessfully in response to Andrew Jackson.
  • While founded on the issue of slavery, the
    Republicans were NOT a single-issue party.
  • They appealed to business and commercial
    interests by promising a protective tariff and a
    transcontinental railway. To farmers they offered
    free land for homesteading.

50
The Republican Party
  • While they failed with their first candidate,
    only four years later in 1860, they won with
    Abraham Lincoln in a complicated (and regionally
    split) presidential election.

51
The Republican Party
  • After the end of the Civil War and
    Reconstruction, Republicans maintained a strong
    base in the North, while Democrats emerged as a
    competitor in the South and had pockets of
    strength in the West and in the border states.

52
Party Machines
  • Party organizations reached their peak of
    development during this system (3rd).
  • Patronage generated by the rapid growth of
    industrial cities provided the resources they
    needed.
  • Party entrepreneurs managed the organizations and
    the resources.
  • The party machines, as they were called, were
    built on simple principles of exchange favors
    and services for votes on election day.

53
Party Machines
  • At this time as well, politics had become a
    full-time profession for thousands (and they were
    generally not from the elite strata of society).
  • Party machines were often not discernible from
    the local government.
  • Pictured Former fireman, later political crook,
    Boss Tweed

54
Party Machines
  • To win elections, the party amassed legions of
    grassroots workers to blanket precincts and
    neighborhoods.
  • In return for their services, workers received
    patronage jobs or other personal benefits from
    their victorious party.
  • Politics had become a full-time profession for
    many of the non-elite.
  • Winning local elections was the focal point and
    goal of the party machines.

55
The Progressive Attack
  • Party machines were regularly attacked as corrupt
    and inefficient.
  • Reformers, working within the system, sought to
    destroy the machines by depriving party leaders
    of the capacity to reward followers.

56
The Progressive Attack
  • The most important changes were introduced during
    what is now called the Progressive Era -- the
    decades before and after the turn of the
    twentieth century.
  • In addition to the introduction of the civil
    service, two of the most important reforms were
    the Australian Ballot and the Direct Primary
    Election.

57
Dismantling the Spoils System
  • After passage of the Pendleton Act in 1883,
    reformers began to replace the spoils system with
    a civil service system.
  • The civil service system turned government jobs
    into careers rather than short-term political
    rewards.
  • Party organizations, therefore, lost one of their
    powerful reward tools.

58
The Secret Ballot
  • Another reform associated with the Progressive
    Era was the secret ballot.
  • Prior to the 1890s, each party produced its own
    ballots (listing only its candidates), which were
    handed to voters outside of the polling place.

59
The Secret Ballot
  • Because they were generally of different colors,
    they were easily distinguishable.
  • Voters could not easily keep their choices to
    themselves, nor could they easily vote for
    candidates of different parties for different
    offices (split their ticket).

60
The Secret Ballot
  • When the secret ballot was introduced, it was
    printed by the government, listed candidates from
    all parties, and was marked in the privacy of a
    voting booth.
  • This made it more difficult for parties to
    exchange votes for favors. Why?

Pictured Teddy Roosevelt
61
The Secret Ballot
  • With the adoption of the secret ballot, the
    government became involved in party nominations,
    because someone had to determine which parties
    and names would be listed on the
    government-produced ballot.
  • Laws were passed to regulate party nominating
    conventions and later, to allow a partys voters
    to nominate candidates through primary elections.
  • Why did this hurt the parties?

62
The Primary and Other Reforms
  • Other reforms included non-partisan elections,
    registration requirements, and introducing the
    notion of city managers and urban services under
    the control of independent boards.
  • While generally focused on eliminating corruption
    in government, progressive reforms were also
    designed to enhance the influence of the right
    kind of people.
  • Stricter voter registration laws discriminated
    against the poor and uneducated.

63
The Consequences of Progressive Reforms
  • These and other changes introduced by the
    Progressives had important consequences for
    electoral politics.
  • Turnout declined due to tighter registration
    laws, the Australian ballot, and literacy tests.

64
The Consequences of Progressive Reforms
  • Lack of patronage kept some individuals from
    participating.
  • The reforms also began to shift the focus of
    electoral politics from parties to candidates.
    Candidates could win with or without the partys
    blessing.
  • By altering the incentives to perform party work,
    reforms shifted the base of the party
    organizations from the working to the middle
    class as the motivations to help the party
    shifted in many cases from material incentives to
    nonmaterial incentives.

65
The Consequences of Progressive Reforms
  • Paradoxically, the Progressive reforms that in
    many ways weakened political parties also made
    them quasi-public, rather than private,
    organizations.
  • Parties were treated by the law in many states as
    essentially public entities charged with managing
    elections.
  • Regulations tended to privilege the two major
    parties and discriminate against new parties and
    independent candidates.

66
The Fourth Party System Republican Ascendancy
  • From the end of Reconstruction in 1876 until
    1896, the third American party system settled
    into place.
  • The Democrats and Republicans competed on nearly
    even terms.

67
The Fourth Party System Republican Ascendancy
  • In 1896, however, the Democrats reacted to a
    severe economic downturn by adopting the Peoples
    Party (Populist) platform.
  • They nominated William Jennings Bryan as their
    presidential nominee.

68
The Fourth Party System Republican Ascendancy
  • Democrats supported making silver as well as gold
    a monetary standard, which would increase the
    money supply, ease interest rates, and therefore
    the pressure on debtors, which included farmers
    and westerners.

69
The Fourth Party System Republican Ascendancy
  • Republicans were able to paint these policies as
    unsound, convincing urban workers that it was a
    threat to their jobs.
  • The reaction to the agrarian takeover of the
    Democrats left the Republicans with a clear
    national majority for the next generation.

70
The Fourth Party System Republican Ascendancy
  • This majority was lost when Republicans were
    affected by economic downturns.
  • Having taken credit for the prosperity of the
    1920s with policies highly favorable to financial
    institutions and industrial corporations, the
    Republicans under the leadership of President
    Herbert Hoover, were saddled with the blame for
    the economic devastation and high unemployment
    that followed the stock market crash of 1929.

71
The Fourth Party System Republican Ascendancy
  • Roosevelt and the Democratic Party took advantage
    of Republican woes and used the New Deal to
    solidify a new coalition of interests, which gave
    them a popular majority that endures, if barely,
    today.

72
The Fifth Party System The New Deal Coalition
  • The New Deal Coalition, as it was called, brought
    together Democrats of all backgrounds.
  • It united white segregationists with northern
    African Americans, progressive intellectuals with
    machine politicians, union members and poor
    farmers, Catholics and Baptists.

73
The Fifth Party System The New Deal Coalition
  • The New Deal had something for everyone -- and
    everyone had been devastated by the blight of the
    Great Depression.
  • The opposing Republican coalition was a smaller,
    inverted image of the Democratic coalition
    business and professional people, upper-income
    Protestants, and residents of small towns and
    cities in the Northeast and the Midwest.

74
Erosion of the New Deal Coalition
  • For as long as the economy dominated national
    politics, campaigns were organized around whether
    one supported the New Deal or not.
  • When new issues became the focus of electoral
    politics, the Democratic coalition began to
    unravel.
  • The first and most important issue was civil
    rights for African Americans.

75
Erosion of the New Deal Coalition
  • As the Democrats and their presidents championed
    the fight against discrimination, Republicans
    attempted to appeal to white southerners with an
    argument against the continued expansion of the
    federal government into the affairs of states.
  • White southerners did leave the Democratic Party
    -- some became Republicans others voted for
    Wallace and then became Republicans some became
    Independents.

76
Erosion of the New Deal Coalition
  • About the same time, the war in Vietnam began to
    split the Democrats (largely along class lines).
  • Traditional Democratic constituencies also were
    divided over new economic initiatives and social
    policy.

77
Erosion of the New Deal Coalition
  • Lyndon Johnsons Great Society programs lacked
    the broad appeal of the New Deal programs.
  • The War on Poverty was targeted to the poor.
    Economic growth slowed during this period, and
    taxes became an important issue.

78
Erosion of the New Deal Coalition
  • Environmental protection posed a dilemma for
    Democrats as well.
  • Republicans still had difficulty during the
    period from the 1950s to the late 1970s as they
    divided into conservative and moderate factions.

79
Erosion of the New Deal Coalition
  • Republicans gradually recovered from their
    tremendous loss in 1964 (the Goldwater ticket)
    with a series of presidential election wins.
  • Nixon, Reagan, and Bush built winning coalitions
    by combining affluent economic conservatives with
    middle and working class social conservatives.

80
Erosion of the New Deal Coalition
  • They declared war on taxation, regulation, and
    welfare.
  • And made prominent their concerns over law and
    order and traditional family values.
  • Neither party has a completely stable and unified
    coalition.

81
Changing the Rules
  • Divisions within the parties electoral
    coalitions during the 1960s were played out in
    intraparty battles that reshaped the parties as
    organizations.
  • During this period, presidential nominations
    underwent significant reform.

82
Changing the Rules
  • The reforms were initiated within the Democratic
    party, but many parts of the reforms also
    affected the Republicans.
  • The civil rights movement, and most strongly the
    Vietnam War, triggered the reform of the
    Democratic Party.
  • Nominations for the partys presidential ticket
    were made by delegates at the national convention.

83
Changing the Rules
  • Democrats who opposed involvement in Vietnam were
    denied access to the process in their efforts to
    nominate an anti-war candidate.
  • VP Hubert Humphrey was the anointed successor of
    Lyndon Johnson and the choice of most party
    regulars.
  • While other Democrats marched in the streets,
    inside the convention hall, Humphrey was
    nominated.

84
Changing the Rules
  • In 1968 the Democratic National Convention broke
    down as protestors rebuked the party candidate
    (Hubert Humphrey) and the party bosses (e.g.,
    Mayor Richard J. Daley). The Chicago police
    violently suppressed the protestors activities.

85
Consequences of Fractured Alignments
  • In order to heal the Democratic coalition --
    (Nixon won in 1968) -- a party commission
    (McGovern-Fraser) drew up a new set of rules
    specifying that the convention delegates had to
    be chosen in a process that was OPEN, TIMELY, AND
    REPRESENTATIVE.
  • Of the options available to state party
    organizations, the primary provided the best
    opportunity for meeting all of these criteria.
  • In 2000, 40 states used the primary method.

86
Consequences of Fractured Alignments
  • Democrats also eliminated the winner-take-all
    WTA method of allocating delegates. Instead
    they used a proportional system.
  • This meant that candidates could win state
    delegates if they garnered state support. Under
    the WTA system, only one candidate could receive
    any delegates in each state.

87
A Whole New Ballgame
  • The new process was now more open, and certainly
    fairer -- but it threatened other party goals --
    namely winning and governing.
  • Primaries among activists do not necessarily
    choose the winning candidate for the general
    election.
  • It also allows outsiders to win the nomination
    (with sometimes negative effects for the party).

88
Changing the Rules
  • After the major changes of the 1970s, the party
    has continued to tweak its rules in response to
    some of the unintended consequences that emerged.
  • In the 1980s super-delegates were introduced.
    These were prominent elected officials who are
    now automatically among the convention delegates.
  • These delegates held 16 percent of the seats at
    the Democrats 2000 convention.

89
Changing the Rules
  • Party leaders have learned how to influence the
    selection process before the conventions.
  • If they can reach broad agreement on which
    candidate to support, they can be decisive.
  • Example, Bush in 2000 faced 12 opponents early
    on, but by the first delegate contest half had
    dropped out.

90
Changing the Rules
  • The decisiveness of primaries has made the
    national convention obsolete in terms of actually
    choosing the partys standard bearer.
  • But the convention is important in terms of the
    image of the party that it portrays.

91
Consequences of Fractured Alignments
  • When issues arise that split the existing party
    coalitions, partisan identities weaken and the
    party label may not provide the information
    voters want.
  • Party-line voting has declined, and ticket
    splitting has increased.
  • Voters have become more indifferent to the
    parties.

92
Consequences of Fractured Alignments
  • With voters substituting personal cues for party
    cues, the electoral advantage enjoyed by
    congressional incumbents has grown.
  • Independent and third-party candidates have
    increased their share of votes.
  • Divided partisan control of governments has
    become common.

93
Media and Money
  • The weakening of party influence on voters was
    hastened by the influence of new technologies and
    the availability of resources outside of party
    organizations.
  • The advent of television and its use as a
    campaign medium was one of the most important
    changes that occurred.

94
The Survival (Revival) of the Parties
  • Despite it all, parties continue to dominate
    electoral politics.
  • Over the past two decades, partisanship revived
    somewhat modestly.
  • Ticket splitting has returned to 1960s levels,
    and voters have become steadily less neutral
    about the major parties since 1980.

95
Partisanship Endures
  • Most people still call themselves Republicans or
    Democrats.
  • And while Independents have increased, most are
    closet partisans leaning toward one party and
    supporting its candidates as consistently as weak
    partisans.
  • Those who are pure Independents are less likely
    to vote in general.
  • The proportion of strong partisans declined
    between the 1950s and 60s, but has since
    rebounded.

96
Party Differences
  • Voters may not think much of parties, but a
    majority of them admit a preference and use
    parties as their cues in voting decisions.
  • Party labels, while somewhat more ambiguous in
    terms of meaning, still carry valuable
    information on party differences.
  • Can you suggest some of the differences you
    perceive between the major parties? What about
    between third and major parties?

97
Changes in the Party Coalitions
  • The party coalitions of today still retain strong
    traces of the New Deal alignment.
  • Lower-income voters are still more likely to be
    Democrats higher-income voters are more likely
    to be Republicans.
  • The crucial changes -- white southerners have
    been moving into the Republican camp. African
    Americans are still strongly loyal to the
    Democratic party.

98
Changes in the Party Coalitions
  • Men have become more Republican, while women have
    not -- creating the famous gender gap between
    parties.
  • Democratic advantage among Catholics has shrunk.
    Regular churchgoers of all kinds have become more
    Republican.
  • During the Reagan years, electorate became more
    Republican, less Democratic.

99
Changes in the Party Coalitions
  • These changes suggest that a sixth party system
    is now in place, but because these changes have
    occurred gradually and at different times, the
    new systems starting date is unclear.
  • Most salient change Republicans stronger.
  • Democrats maintain an edge in party identifiers,
    those who vote at higher rates tend to be
    Republicans.
  • The competitive nature of the 2000 elections
    reflects the publics current party preferences.

100
Modern Party Organizations
  • Despite the rise of television, other electronic
    campaign media, and campaign consultants, parties
    are still useful to candidates as well as voters.
  • Party organizations have not disappeared.
  • May be in better shape than in the past.

101
Modern Party Organizations
  • The national committee, with at least two members
    from each state, is charged with conducting the
    partys affairs between national conventions.
  • State committees and their chairs oversee the
    committees representing congressional and state
    legislative districts and counties.
  • These are followed by divisions that include
    township, city, ward, and precinct committees.

102
Modern Party Organizations
  • This may seem hierarchical, but it is not in
    terms of the nature of the organizations
    relationships.
  • At most levels, they are controlled by elected
    officials.
  • National committee of the presidents party is
    controlled by the president.
  • Same at the state level with governor.
  • House and Senate candidates have their own
    separate national campaign organizations, and
    they control them.
  • Result organizational fragmentation.

103
Modern Party Organizations
  • While modern parties continue to play a major
    financial and organizational role in electoral
    politics, they have clearly lost the
    near-monopoly they had on campaign resources
    until the mid-20th century.
  • Candidates are the focus of campaigns.
  • Parties are there to serve the candidates, not
    control them.

104
Expediency Persists
  • American parties developed and have endured
    because they have proven useful to politicians
    and voters attempting to act collectively within
    the institutional framework provided by the
    Constitution.
  • Although the party coalitions have shifted
    periodically in response to new national issues
    and conflicts -- leaving five (six) identifiable
    party systems, the basic pattern of two-party
    competition has persisted.

105
Expediency Persists
  • Progressive Era reforms, followed by the advent
    of new communication technology, weakened
    traditional party organizations and ended their
    campaign monopoly.
  • But they still play a central role.
  • Voters rely heavily on them for voting cues.
  • Party entrepreneurs will continue to utilize
    parties to do what they were created to do in the
    first place elect those who share their views so
    that they may shape public policy to their liking.
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