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AP Review Session

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Title: AP Review Session


1
AP Review Session 2
  • Political Parties, Interest Groups the Media

2
Political Parties Generalizations
  • Democrats
  • Lower SES
  • Lower ED Intellectuals
  • Minorities
  • Blue-collar/Union
  • Urban
  • Coastal
  • Women
  • Non-Christians
  • Non-Church goer
  • Republicans
  • Higher SES
  • Above Avg. Ed
  • WASPs
  • White collar
  • Rural/Suburban
  • Middle America
  • Men
  • Christian
  • Regular Church goer

3
Purpose of political parties
  • Nominate candidates for office
  • Run campaigns
  • Give cues to voters
  • Articulate politics
  • Coordinate policy-making (the party-in-govt.)

4
Party Structure
  • National Level
  • Chairperson various committees that plan the
    natl conventions fundraise for congressional
    candidates
  • State Local Level
  • Parties vary greatly from state to state (CA DEMs
    are much crunchier than AL DEMs)
  • State local party machines have lost power to
    the national level in the last decades
  • Think of it like a pyramid

5
Parties within Parties
  • Democratic Party
  • Helping Hand DEM
  • Discouraged White DEM
  • Determined Liberals
  • Libertarian DEM
  • Republican Party
  • Liberal REPs
  • Religious Conservatives
  • Business REPs
  • Neo-Cons

6
Why do we have 2 dominant political parties?
  • Electoral system the Electoral College
  • Electoral system- single member districts won by
    plurality vs. proportional representation
  • Political socialization
  • Practicality
  • Commonality of view (Big-tent parties)
  • British tradition (Tories cs. Whigs)
  • Laws against third parties
  • Signatures (over 700,000 required)

7
Third Parties
  • Splinter parties potential kingmakers
  • Bull Moose split the R vote in 1918
  • Strom Thurmond the Dixiecrats (recd 29
    electoral votes in 1948)
  • George Wallaces American Independent Party of
    1968 ( recd 46 electoral votes)
  • Perot factor in 1996
  • Nader the Green Party in 2000 (95,000 votes
    in FLA when 537 votes separated Bush Gore)
  • Ideological Parties
  • Socialists, Independents
  • Single Issue Parties
  • Greenpeace, Free-Soilers
  • Economic Protest Parties
  • Greenback Party
  • Take Away Point Dissolve when major parties
    steal their issues
  • Perots Reform Party

8
Why are parties getting weaker? Dealignment
  • Drastic increase in Independents
  • Ticket-splitting on the rise
  • Cynicism political apathy on the rise
  • Decentralized party structure (no more party
    bosses parties from state to state are so
    different)
  • Mass media- image of candidates is stressed, not
    the party
  • Decrease in importance of caucuses/conventions
    increase in power of primaries
  • Interest groups have exploded
  • Divided government

9
Party Realignment
  • Typically occurs after one party has been
    dominant for a long period of time
  • New issues combined w/economic or political
    crises allowing a new coalition to form
  • Voters shift support from one party to another
    must last for many years
  • New coalition gains dominant control of
    government (controls both Congress the White
    House)

10
Critical Elections
  • The electoral earthquakes when realignment has
    occurred
  • 1800 Jeffersonian Republicans
  • 1828 Jacksonian Democrats
  • 1860 Republicans
  • Dont worry about memorizing these factstoo
    historical. Focus on 1932 whats happening
    now.

11
1932 Critical Election
  • 1932 FDRs New Deal Coalition
  • Comprised of unionized labor, urban ethnic
    groups, southerners, MC liberals
  • Dominated the govt of politics of the US until
    1960s when it was shattered by conflicts over
    race, Vietnam govt policy
  • Split the electorate into groups we associate
    with the DEM REP parties today

12
1980? -The Reagan Realignment?
  • 12 years of White House control (Reagan Bush 1)
  • Reagan won in 1984 carrying 49 states
  • Breakup of Democratic Solid South
  • Both houses of Congress controlled by DEMs for
    almost the entire 1980s and into the 90s
  • Bush was at 91 approval rating in 1991, but lost
    in 1992 to Clinton
  • 1994 REP Revolution captured Congress for the
    REPs, but their majority is tenuous
  • Schism in REP party between fiscal conservatives
    social conservatives

13
Is there a Post-9/11 Realignment?
  • Reasons For
  • Reasons Against

14
Interest Groups What are they?
  • Organization of people w/ similar policy goals
    who enter the political process to try achieve
    those aims BUT dont run their own candidates for
    office
  • SIGs access many levels branches of govt no
    govt stone shall be left unturned!
  • Other goals
  • Education
  • Agenda-building
  • Program Monitoring (watchdog role)
  • Political Parties MAKE policy, SIGS INFLUENCE
    policy!

15
What do SIGs do?
  • 1. Provide data to govt agencies. SIGs
    arepolicy specialists (Pol parties are party
    generalists)
  • 2. Draft legislation via the Iron Triangle
    (issue) network of
  • SIGS, Govt agencies, Congressional
    subcommittees
  • 3. Lawsuits (amicus curiae, Friend of the court)
    class action court cases.
  • 4. Education
  • 5. Watchdogs of govt. . .
  • 6. Lobbyists- hired guns or political
    persuaders, whose job is to promote the SIGS
    interests via. . .pressure (garnering votes,
    )
  • Rating Legislators
  • Wine Dine

16
Interest Groups Pluralism
  • Linkage institution link people to their govt
    (like elections parties)
  • Vast of SIGs
  • Groups compete
  • Not all groups are , but do have opportunity to
    influence govt
  • Federalist 10 factions bad, so lets have lots
    of them 1st Amendment

17
Interest Groups Elitism
  • Sure, there are lots of groupsbut many dont
    matter
  • Real power access held by big biz interests
  • Social class SIG membership
  • Who runs the group?
  • Does the leadership of the NRA reflect the belief
    of its rank-and-file membership?

18
Interest Groups Hyperpluralism
  • Lowis interest group liberalism
  • Refers to govts excessive deference to groups
    the govt tyring to advance the goals of too many
    groups
  • In an effort to appease every interest, agencies
    proliferate, conflicting regulations expand,
    programs multiply, budgets skyrocket
  • Sub-governments Iron triangles
  • MIC
  • Tobacco

19
Interest Group Examples
  • AARP
  • AFL-CIO
  • NAM
  • Sierra Club
  • NAACP
  • NOW
  • Leadership PACs
  • GOPAC, Obamas Hopefund
  • Right to Life
  • ACLU
  • ABA
  • AMA
  • NEA/AFTY
  • Moveon.org

20
What makes SIGs powerful?
  • Size of the group- a mixture of many who could
    belong
  • Potential groups (or large groups) suffer from
    free-rider status. i.e. all minimum wage
    earners benefit from minimum wage increases, so
    why work toward it. . .
  • Intensity
  • Single issue groups - NRA, NOW, Gun Control,
    abortion
  • 3. Money -
  • - 1974 corporations and unions cant directly
    fund political campaigns. . .BUT they can set up
    Political Action Committees (PACS) , the
    fundraising arm of SIGS, can fund candidates
    campaigns up to 5,000
  • - Money goes overwhelmingly to incumbents
  • - 527s groups can raise unlimited amounts of
    use it for voter mobilization, issue advocacy,
    but NOT for candidate advocacy or to be given to
    candidates

21
More about SIGs and Money
  • Hard money goes directly to candidates
  • Soft money (1980) - Can earmark funds to a
    political party, unlimited contributions. . .
    400 million allocated in 2000 election to Dems
    Republicans
  • Today soft money is illegal McCain-Feingold
    Campaign Finance Law.

22
The Media
  • Media newspapers, television, radio, World Wide
    Web
  • Most peoples knowledge of politics comes from
    the media
  • Laws in the U.S. give the media substantial
    freedom
  • There is a long tradition of private media
    ownership in U.S.

23
History of Media in Politics
  • Yellow journalism 1890s
  • FDRs Fireside Chats- 1930s
  • Nixons Checkers Speech- 1952
  • Nixon Kennedy Debates- 1960
  • LBJ Political Ad (girl picking flowers)
  • Woodward Bernstein H20gate
  • Clinton The Great Communicator

24
Now
  • Shorter sound bites on the nightly news make it
    more difficult for candidates officeholders to
    convey their message
  • 1968 43.1 secs
  • 1996 8.2 secs
  • Politicians now have more sourcescable,
    early-morning news, news magazine shows
  • 40 of American households access the Internet

25
Role of the National Press
  • Gatekeeper influences what subjects become
    national political issues for how long
  • Scorekeeper tracks political reputations
    candidacies
  • Watchdog investigates personalities exposes
    scandals

26
Media and Campaigns
  • Traditional Ads
  • Web-based Ads
  • Talk radio
  • Movies
  • Narrowcasting- (focus on specific news or issues
    24 hours a day) may fulfill political junkies or
    spin issues out of control
  • Humor Jib-Jab
  • Popular Music
  • Media Events - Get name or picture in print or on
    the tube!
  • Horserace Reporting
  • The New Media-
  • Drudge
  • Tabloid
  • Blogs

27
The Media and Campaigns
  • Equal access for all candidates
  • Rates no higher than the cheapest commercial rate
  • Now stations networks can sponsor debates
    limited to major candidates

28
Media Bias
  • Members of the national media are generally more
    liberal than the average citizenor are they?
  • Al Frankens Thesis Reporters might be liberal,
    but networks tend to be conservative
  • Conservative media outlets have become more
    visible in recent years
  • Talk radio is predominantly conservative
  • Journalistic philosophy is that the news should
    be neutral and objective

29
Coverage of Government
  • The president receives the most coverage
  • Gavel-to-gavel coverage of House proceedings
    since 1979 (C-SPAN)
  • Senatorial use of televised committee hearings
    has turned the Senate into a presidential
    candidate incubator

30
Washington is a Sieve
  • on background
  • a high placed government source
  • Trial balloons
  • Deep throat Mark Felt

31
Government Constraints on the Media
  • Reporters must strike a balance between
    expressing critical views maintaining sources
  • Governmental tools to fight back numerous press
    officers, press releases, leaks, bypass the
    national press in favor of local media,
    presidential rewards and punishments

32
Telecommunications Act of 1996
  • Relaxed limitations on media ownership
  • Own up to 35 of TV market
  • Own unlimited of radio market Clear Channel
  • Cable companies selling telephone, etc.

33
Media Conglomerates
  • Concentrated ownership of the media
  • Gannett owns USA Today and controls the biggest
    daily circulation in the nation owns 100
    additional newspapers
  • Rupert Murdoch owns 124 radio stations, NY Post,
    Weekly Standard, FOX News

34
Remember,.media
  • Impacts WHAT we think ABOUT, not what to think!
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