Dancing Without Partners: How Candidates, Parties, and Interest Groups Interact in the Presidential Campaign

Political parties, interest groups, and candidate campaigns all pursue similar goals in presidential elections: each entity attempts to mobilize voters. However, the regulatory environment often prevents these groups from coordinating their efforts. With participants playing by new rules mandated by the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, the 2004 presidential election included previously unseen configurations and alliances between political actors. In some campaign situations, the resulting "dance" was carefully choreographed. In others, dancers stepped on each other's toes. In still others, participants could only eye each other across the floor. Dancing without Partners intensively analyzes the relationships among candidates, political parties, and interest groups under the BCRA's new regulations in the 2004 election cycle in five battleground states. The chapters assess the ways in which the rules of the game have changed the game itself—and also how they haven't. The result is a book that will be invaluable to researchers and students of presidential elections.

Product details

Author: David B. Magleby (Contribution by, Editor); J. Quin Monson (Contribution by); Kelly D. Patterson (Contribution by, Editor); Lonna Rae Atkeson (Contribution by); Stephen Brooks (Contribution by); Robert E. Crew (Contribution by); Rick Farmer (Contribution by); Michael Margolis (Contribution by); Laura Wiedlocher (Contribution by)
Language: English
Vendor: Commercial
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated
Publication date: 2006
ISBN: 9780742553491
Category: Book
Subcategory: Hardcover
Added: April 23, 2014