The collapse of the democratic presidential majority : realignment, dealignment, and electoral change from Franklin Roosevelt to Bill Clinton

書誌事項

The collapse of the democratic presidential majority : realignment, dealignment, and electoral change from Franklin Roosevelt to Bill Clinton

David G. Lawrence

(Transforming American politics series)

Westview Press, 1996

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 199-207) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The Collapse of the Democratic Presidential Majority makes sense of the last half century of American presidential elections as part of a transition from a world in which realignment was still possible to a dealigned political universe. The book combines analysis of presidential elections in the postwar world with theories of electoral changeshowing how Reagan bridged the eras of re- and dealignment and why Clinton was elected despite the postwar trend. American electoral politics since World War II stubbornly refuse to fit the theories of political scientists. The long collapse of the Democratic presidential majority does not look much like the classic realignments of the past: The Republicans made no corresponding gains in sub-presidential elections and never won the loyalty of a majority of the electorate in terms of party identification. And yet, the period shows a stability of Republican dominance quite at odds with the volatility and unpredictability central to the competing theory of dealignment. The Collapse of the Democratic Presidential Majority makes sense of the last half century of American presidential elections as part of a transition from a world in which realignment was still possible to a dealigned political universe. The book combines analysis of presidential elections in the postwar world with theories of electoral changeshowing how Reagan bridged the eras of re- and dealignment and why Clinton was elected despite the postwar trend.

目次

  • Introduction
  • The Collapse of the Democratic Presidential Majority
  • The Decline of New Deal Economic Cleavage: Social Class and Issue Salience
  • Decreasingly Latent Cleavages: Race and the Roosevelt Coalition from 1948 to 1972
  • The Emergence of the Second Mini-Realignment: Ideological Extremity and Democratic Defection
  • The Fragile Extension of the Second Mini-Realignment: Retrospective Voting and the Politics of Prosperity
  • Mondales Revenge: Ideology and Retrospective Evaluations in 1992
  • Conclusion: Realignment, Dealignment, and Electoral Change from Roosevelt to Clinton.

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