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The Democratic Party heads north, 1877-1962
Author:
ISBN: 0521858275 0521675006 9780511388828 0511388829 9780511611506 0511611501 9780521858274 9780521675000 1107177316 1281254533 9786611254537 0511387830 0511386842 0511385013 0511383142 Year: 2006 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

This book examines the dynamics of the American party system and explores how contemporary American politics was formed. Specifically, it asks how the Democrats could become sufficiently competitive in the American North as to be able to construct a national political majority. It rejects the conventional account, based on 'realignment theory', that between the end of Reconstruction and the Civil Rights Revolution, the base level of support for the Democratic party varied greatly from one era to another. Instead, by distinguishing between the 'building blocks' available to the Democrats in coalition formation and the aggregation of those 'blocks' into an actual coalition, the author shows that there was much less variation over time in the available 'blocks' than is usually argued. Neither the economic depression of 1893 nor the New Deal had the impact on the party system that most political scientists claim.

The American direct primary : party institutionalization and transformation in the North
Author:
ISBN: 110712591X 1280434163 0511177445 0511042523 0511147775 0511305028 0511509936 0511045697 9780511042522 0521814928 9780521814928 9780511045691 9780511509933 9781280434167 9780511177446 9780511147777 9780511305023 9780521109727 0521109728 Year: 2002 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

This book rejects conventional accounts of how American political parties differ from those in other democracies. It focuses on the introduction of the direct primary and argues that primaries resulted from a process of party institutionalization initiated by party elites. It overturns the widely accepted view that, between 1902 and 1915, direct primaries were imposed on the parties by anti-party reformers intent on weakening them. An examination of particular northern states shows that often the direct primary was not controversial, and only occasionally did it involve confrontation between party 'regulars' and their opponents. Rather, the impetus for direct nominations came from attempts within the parties to subject informal procedures to formal rules. However, it proved impossible to reform the older caucus-convention system effectively, and party elites then turned to the direct primary - a device that already had become more common in rural counties in the late nineteenth century.

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