000466664 000__ 09597cam\a2200289\a\4500 000466664 001__ 466664 000466664 005__ 20210513162917.0 000466664 008__ 990331s2000\\\\maua\\\\\b\\\\001\0\eng\\ 000466664 010__ $$a 99062371 000466664 020__ $$a031215254X (pbk.) 000466664 020__ $$a9780312152543 (pbk.) 000466664 020__ $$a0312232551 000466664 020__ $$a9780312232559 000466664 035__ $$a(OCoLC)ocm47863066 000466664 040__ $$aDLC$$beng$$cDLC$$dYDXCP$$dOCLCG$$dYOM$$dDEBBG$$dHDC$$dISE 000466664 043__ $$an-us--- 000466664 049__ $$aISEA 000466664 05000 $$aJK2261$$b.W548 2000 000466664 08200 $$a324.273$$221 000466664 1001_ $$aWhite, John Kenneth,$$d1952- 000466664 24510 $$aNew party politics :$$bfrom Jefferson and Hamilton to the information age /$$cJohn Kenneth White, Daniel M. Shea. 000466664 260__ $$aBoston :$$bBedford/St. Martin's,$$cc2000. 000466664 300__ $$axvii, 333 p. :$$bill. ;$$c24 cm. 000466664 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 000466664 50500 $$tIntroduction: Rethinking Political Parties in the Information Age$$g1 --$$g1$$tPolitical Parties in an American Setting$$g13 --$$tPolitical Parties: Institutions Americans Love to Hate$$g14 --$$tPraise from the Ivory Tower$$g16 --$$tPolitics without Parties$$g16 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Gejdenson versus White on the Importance of Political Parties$$g17 --$$tThree Important Party Distinctions$$g18 --$$tHow Parties Differ from Other Organizations$$g18 --$$tThe Components of American Political Parties$$g19 --$$tDoes the Tripod Work in the Information Age?$$g21 --$$tWhat Do Political Parties Seek to Accomplish?$$g23 --$$tThe Battle of the Titans: Hamilton Versus Jefferson$$g27 --$$tLike God, Parties are not Dead$$g30 --$$g2$$tThe Ascendance of Party Politics$$g33 --$$tThe Pre-Party Era$$g33 --$$tThe Colonial Experience$$g34 --$$tNascent Parties: Federalists Versus Republicans$$g37 --$$tParty Rule: 1824-1912$$g40 --$$tBreakdown and Renewal: The Election of 1824$$g41 --$$tThe Jackson-Van Buren Alliance$$g42 --$$tThe Rise of Mass-Based Politics and the Emergence of the Spoils System$$g44 --$$tThe Interregnum: Parties and the Civil War$$g45 --$$tThe Coming of the Machine$$g48 --$$tThe Parties Speak: A Day in the Life of Party Boss George Washington Plunkitt$$g49 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard J. Daley on Patronage$$g51 --$$tParties "American Style"$$g52 --$$g3$$tThe Decline of Party Politics$$g55 --$$t"Clean it Up!": The Progressive Movement$$g56 --$$tEnter the Progressives$$g57 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Robert M. LaFollette, Sr., "The Menace of the Machine" (1897)$$g61 --$$tWhy the Progressive Movement Was Successful$$g65 --$$tAn End to Party Politics?$$g68 --$$tFranklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal$$g70 --$$tThe New Deal and Party Politics$$g71 --$$tPolitical Parties and the Cold War$$g72 --$$tThe Rise of Interest Groups$$g74 --$$tThe Interest Group Explosion$$g74 --$$tThe Rise of Candidate-Centered Politics$$g76 --$$tParty Activist versus Professional Consultant$$g76 --$$tParty Member versus Nonpartisan Candidate$$g77 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Ed Rollins and the "Campaign from Hell"$$g78 --$$tParty Affiliation versus Voting Choice$$g79 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Louis LaPolla, "The Pothole Mayor," A Case Study in Ambition$$g80 --$$tA Partyless Age?$$g81 --$$g4$$tParty Organizations in the Twenty-First Century$$g84 --$$tOrganizational Adjustment and Growth$$g86 --$$tThe Rebirth of the Republican National Committee$$g87 --$$tThe Democratic National Committee Plays Catch-Up$$g89 --$$tNew Technologies in the Information Age$$g89 --$$tThe Emergence of Legislative Campaign Committees$$g93 --$$tThe Hill Committees$$g93 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Congressman David Price on the Role of Party in Campaigns$$g96 --$$tState Legislative Campaign Committees$$g97 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Party Leaders Voice Concerns about Legislative Campaign Committees$$g98 --$$tWither the Local Parties?$$g99 --$$tEvidence of Local Party Renewal$$g99 --$$tEvidence of Local Party Decline$$g102 --$$tRevitalists Versus Declinists$$g103 --$$g5$$tNominating Presidents in the Information Age$$g108 --$$tWhat Kind of President?$$g108 --$$tFrom John Adams to Bill Clinton: The Problem of Presidential Selection$$g113 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Alexander Hamilton on Choosing an American President$$g114 --$$tHamilton's Family Versus Jefferson's Community$$g116 --$$tThe Rise of Nominating Conventions$$g117 --$$tThe Rise of Hamiltonian Nationalism$$g120 --$$tThe McGovern-Fraser Commission$$g121 --$$tThe Parties Speak: The New Republic's Reflections on the Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy and the Democratic Party of 1968$$g122 --$$tAre Primaries and Caucuses Representative?$$g128 --$$tRepublicans Follow the McGovern-Fraser Lead$$g130 --$$tThe Unintended Consequences of the McGovern-Fraser Reforms$$g132 --$$tThe Mikulski and Winograd Commissions$$g133 --$$tEnter the Superdelegates$$g134 --$$tLooking to 2000$$g135 --$$g6$$tParty Brand Loyalty and the American Voter$$g140 --$$tThe Importance of Party Indentification$$g142 --$$tMeasuring Party Identification$$g145 --$$tIs Party Identification Obsolete?$$g147 --$$tThe Making of an Idea: Party Realignment$$g147 --$$tV. O. Key and Party Realignment$$g148 --$$tThe Parties Speak: V. O. Key and the Theory of Party Realignment$$g149 --$$tParty Realignment: The Death of a Concept?$$g152 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Everett C. Ladd, Like Waiting for Godot, the Uselessness of Party Realignment$$g154 --$$tWhere are the Voters Going?$$g157 --$$tThe End of the New Deal Coalition$$g157 --$$tHere Come the Ticket-Splitters$$g157 --$$tParty Coalitions in the Clinton Era$$g160 --$$tThe Gender Gap$$g163 --$$tDivided Government$$g166 --$$tWhat's Left for Parties?$$g169 --$$g7$$tState and Local Parties: Mom-and-Pop Shops in the Information Age$$g174 --$$tState and Local Parties in the Information Age$$g175 --$$tRegulating State Parties$$g176 --$$tParty Structure$$g177 --$$tA Network of Allied Party Groups$$g180 --$$tThe Parties Speak: David Rehr on the National Beer Wholesalers Association and the GOP$$g182 --$$tWho Belongs?$$g184 --$$tPrimary Voters$$g184 --$$tOfficials in the Party Organization$$g189 --$$tActivists$$g191 --$$tLocal Political Culture$$g192 --$$tThe Parties Speak: The "Amateur Democrats"$$g194 --$$tWhat State and Local Parties Do$$g195 --$$tManifest Party Functions$$g195 --$$tNassau County Republicans: A Machine That Keeps on Ticking$$g197 --$$tThe Kings County Republican Committee: Fighting the Nonpartisan Tide$$g198 --$$tThe Loudoun County Democrats: An Information Age Revival Story$$g199 --$$tDare County Democratic Committee: Hoping for a Policy Makeover$$g200 --$$tState and Local Parties, Computers, and the Internet$$g201 --$$tDesktop Tools$$g201 --$$tState Parties on the Net$$g201 --$$tComputers to the Rescue?$$g203 --$$gAppendix A$$tRepublican State Committee Web Sites as of 1998$$g204 --$$gAppendix B$$tDemocratic State Committee Web Sites as of 1998$$g205 --$$g8$$tCampaign Finance and Information Age Political Parties$$g208 --$$tA Brief Look at Money in Elections$$g210 --$$gPhase 1$$tMoney as a Supplement to Party Activities (1790s to 1880s)$$g210 --$$gPhase 2$$tThe Rise of Corporate Politics (1880s to 1950s)$$g211 --$$gPhase 3$$tMedia-Centered Elections (1960s to the Present)$$g213 --$$tEfforts to Regulate the Flow of Money in Elections$$g214 --$$tMeaningful Reform: Watergate and Federal Reforms$$g216 --$$tA Challenge in the Courts: Buckley v. Valeo$$g218 --$$tThe Rise of PACs$$g220 --$$tCreative Party Finances in the Information Age$$g222 --$$tIssue Advocacy$$g223 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Ten Myths about Money in Politics$$g224 --$$tIndependent Expenditures$$g227 --$$tHard and Soft Money$$g229 --$$tTransfers to State Party Committees$$g231 --$$tBundling$$g232 --$$tFunding Nominating Conventions$$g233 --$$tThe Future of Party Finance in America$$g233 --$$g9$$tElected Officials: The Reluctant Sales Force of the Party System$$g237 --$$tThe Parties Speak: The 1994 House Republicans' Contract with America$$g238 --$$tThe President as Party Leader$$g240 --$$tThe Party in Congress$$g241 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Toward a More Responsible Two-Party System$$g245 --$$tThe Contract with America$$g247 --$$tThe Parties Speak: The House Judiciary Committee on the Question of Impeachment$$g252 --$$tThe Rise of the Public Speakership$$g252 --$$tHamilton's Congress?$$g255 --$$g10$$tThird Parties and the Information Age: The Orphans of American Politics$$g264 --$$tThe Third-Party Paradox$$g265 --$$tInstitutional Barriers$$g267 --$$tAmerican Political Culture$$g273 --$$tThe Momentum of History$$g276 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Benjamin C. Bubar, 1976 and 1980 Prohibition Party Presidential Nominee$$g278 --$$tSignificant Third parties in American History$$g280 --$$tThe Anti-Mason Party$$g281 --$$tThe Free-Soil Party$$g281 --$$tThe American (Know-Nothing) Party$$g282 --$$tThe Greenback and Populists (People's) Parties$$g283 --$$tThe Progressives: 1912-1924$$g285 --$$tThe Parties Speak: William Jennings Bryan's "Cross of Gold" Speech Presented to the Democratic National Convention, Chicago, Illinois, July 8, 1896$$g286 --$$tHenry Wallace and the Progressive Party of 1948$$g287 --$$tState's Rights Party (1948) and the American Independent Party (1968)$$g289 --$$tThe Reform Party$$g290 --$$tThird Parties in the Information Age$$g291 --$$tAn Explosion of Minor Parties$$g291 --$$tChanges in Voter Attitudes toward Minor Parties$$g293 --$$tMinor Parties and the Internet$$g294 --$$tJefferson, Hamilton, and the Future of Third Parties in America$$g296 --$$tThe Parties Speak: Ventura Win Marks Dawn of New Era: Age of Digital Politics$$g297 --$$tConclusion: Hamilton's Triumph and the Advent of the "Base-Less" Party System$$g302 --$$tThe 1998 Election and the "Base-Less" Party System$$g307 --$$tParty Politics in the Next Millennium$$g312 --$$tVoter Trends$$g312 --$$tOrganizational Developments$$g312 --$$tLegislative Politics$$g313 --$$tNew Laws$$g313 --$$tMinor Parties$$g314. 000466664 650_0 $$aPolitical parties$$zUnited States$$xHistory. 000466664 7001_ $$aShea, Daniel M. 000466664 85200 $$bgen$$hJK2261$$i.W548$$i2000 000466664 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:466664$$pGLOBAL_SET 000466664 980__ $$aBIB 000466664 980__ $$aBOOK