Description

Book Synopsis

Polsby and Wildavsky’s classic text, now updated by Stephen Schier and David Hopkins, argues that the institutional rules of the presidential nomination and election processes, in combination with the behavior of the mass electorate, structure the strategic choices faced by politicians in powerful and foreseeable ways. We can make sense of the decisions made by different political actors—incumbents, challengers, Democrats, Republicans, consultants, party officials, activists, delegates, journalists, and voters—by understanding the ways in which their world is organized by incentives, regulations, events, resources, customs, and opportunities. Thoroughly revised and updated, this Sixteenth Edition provides everything students need to know about presidential elections going into the 2024 cycle.



Table of Contents

List of Figures, Tables, and Boxes

Preface

PART I. THE STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENT
1. VOTERS
Why People Don’t Vote
Why People Do Vote: A Theory of Social Connectedness
Party Identification as Social Identity
Parties as Aggregates of Loyal Voters
Ideologies, Issues, and National Conditions in the Minds of Voters
Changes in Party Identification: Social Habit versus Contemporary Evaluation
A Central Strategic Problem: The Attentiveness of Voters

2. GROUPS
The Presidential Vote as an Aggregation of Interest Groups
Variations among Interest Groups
“Special” Interests, Campaign Spending, and Public Interest Groups
Political Parties as Organizations
Third Parties

3. RULES AND RESOURCES
Rules: The Electoral College
Thinking About Resources
Resources: Money
Resources: Control over Information
Incumbency as a Resource: The Presidency
Incumbency as a Liability: The Vice Presidency
The Balance of Resources

PART II. SEQUENCES
4. THE NOMINATION PROCESS
Before the Voting Begins: The “Invisible Primary”
The Early States

What Do These Historical Vignettes Teach?
Super Tuesday and Later Primaries
State and Territorial Caucuses
Delegate Allocation
Superdelegates

An Ever-Changing Nomination Process
The National Party Conventions

The Convention as Advertising
The Vice Presidential Nominee
The Future of National Conventions

5. THE CAMPAIGN
The Well-Traveled Candidates
Persuading Voters
Winning the Media Game
Campaign Professionals
Televised Debates
Getting Out the Vote
Campaign Blunders
Forecasting the Outcome
Counting the Vote

PART III. ISSUES
6. APPRAISALS
Reform upon Reform
The Political Theory of Policy Government
Reform by Means of Participatory Democracy
Some Specific Reforms
Party Platforms and Party Differences

7. AMERICAN PARTIES AND DEMOCRACY
Elections and Public Policy
Parties of Advocacy versus Parties of Intermediation

APPENDIXES
A. Vote by Groups in Presidential Elections, 1984–2020
B. Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, by Population Characteristics, 1984–2020
C. Selections from the Democratic and Republican Party Platforms, 2020

Notes

Index

Presidential Elections: Strategies and Structures

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    A Paperback / softback by Nelson W. Polsby, Aaron Wildavsky, Steven E. Schier

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      View other formats and editions of Presidential Elections: Strategies and Structures by Nelson W. Polsby

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 18/07/2023
      ISBN13: 9781538183717, 978-1538183717
      ISBN10: 1538183714

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Polsby and Wildavsky’s classic text, now updated by Stephen Schier and David Hopkins, argues that the institutional rules of the presidential nomination and election processes, in combination with the behavior of the mass electorate, structure the strategic choices faced by politicians in powerful and foreseeable ways. We can make sense of the decisions made by different political actors—incumbents, challengers, Democrats, Republicans, consultants, party officials, activists, delegates, journalists, and voters—by understanding the ways in which their world is organized by incentives, regulations, events, resources, customs, and opportunities. Thoroughly revised and updated, this Sixteenth Edition provides everything students need to know about presidential elections going into the 2024 cycle.



      Table of Contents

      List of Figures, Tables, and Boxes

      Preface

      PART I. THE STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENT
      1. VOTERS
      Why People Don’t Vote
      Why People Do Vote: A Theory of Social Connectedness
      Party Identification as Social Identity
      Parties as Aggregates of Loyal Voters
      Ideologies, Issues, and National Conditions in the Minds of Voters
      Changes in Party Identification: Social Habit versus Contemporary Evaluation
      A Central Strategic Problem: The Attentiveness of Voters

      2. GROUPS
      The Presidential Vote as an Aggregation of Interest Groups
      Variations among Interest Groups
      “Special” Interests, Campaign Spending, and Public Interest Groups
      Political Parties as Organizations
      Third Parties

      3. RULES AND RESOURCES
      Rules: The Electoral College
      Thinking About Resources
      Resources: Money
      Resources: Control over Information
      Incumbency as a Resource: The Presidency
      Incumbency as a Liability: The Vice Presidency
      The Balance of Resources

      PART II. SEQUENCES
      4. THE NOMINATION PROCESS
      Before the Voting Begins: The “Invisible Primary”
      The Early States

      What Do These Historical Vignettes Teach?
      Super Tuesday and Later Primaries
      State and Territorial Caucuses
      Delegate Allocation
      Superdelegates

      An Ever-Changing Nomination Process
      The National Party Conventions

      The Convention as Advertising
      The Vice Presidential Nominee
      The Future of National Conventions

      5. THE CAMPAIGN
      The Well-Traveled Candidates
      Persuading Voters
      Winning the Media Game
      Campaign Professionals
      Televised Debates
      Getting Out the Vote
      Campaign Blunders
      Forecasting the Outcome
      Counting the Vote

      PART III. ISSUES
      6. APPRAISALS
      Reform upon Reform
      The Political Theory of Policy Government
      Reform by Means of Participatory Democracy
      Some Specific Reforms
      Party Platforms and Party Differences

      7. AMERICAN PARTIES AND DEMOCRACY
      Elections and Public Policy
      Parties of Advocacy versus Parties of Intermediation

      APPENDIXES
      A. Vote by Groups in Presidential Elections, 1984–2020
      B. Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, by Population Characteristics, 1984–2020
      C. Selections from the Democratic and Republican Party Platforms, 2020

      Notes

      Index

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