Political Parties
I. Introduction Roosevelt's Electoral Victory
and Legislative Defeat
The Democratic party victory in the 1936 national election
reflected a fundamental shift in the country with Democrats
replacing Republicans as the dominant party in American
politics. The process of party realignment began in the late
1920s, accelerated during Franklin Roosevelt's electoral
defeat of President Herbert Hoover in 1932, and reached
fruition in the 1936 landslide victory. In that election,
FDR and the Democratic party united the South, northern urban
voters, white ethnics, blacks, organized labor, Jews, and
Catholics in the Democratic party coalition that dominated
American politics for the next three decades.
Many Americans saw Roosevelt's overwhelming victory against
Republican Alf Landon as a referendum on the New Deal,
Roosevelt's program to end the Great Depression. However,
despite FDR's personal landslide victory and the dominance of
the Democratic party, the president failed in his efforts to
extend the New Deal as he promised in the 1936 campaign.
Roosevelt's most visible defeat came on his court-packing
plan, which was a proposal to enlarge the Supreme Court to
allow the president to appoint justices favorable to his New
Deal. FDR lost badly on the issue and was abandoned by many
members of his own Democratic party in Congress and around
the country.
This story tells us a great deal about American political
parties and how they are different from political parties in
other democratic countries. In most parliamentary systems
(such as those in Great Britain, Germany, or Sweden), a
political party that enjoys a large legislative majority (as
did the Democrats after the 1936 election) would have no
trouble passing legislation to which its leadership was
committed.
In such systems, members of political parties tend to vote as
a unified block in parliament, usually guided by the wishes
of the prime minister, cabinet, or party central committee.
American political parties, however, are different. They do
not act in a unified fashion. Elected and appointed
officials carrying the party label are as likely as not to go
their own way, ignoring the appeals of party leaders, and
striking their own deals. This chapter discusses why this is
so and what implications this has for democracy in the United
States.
II. What Are Political Parties and Their Role
in a Democracy?
Political parties are organizations that try to gain control
over government by electing officials to public office who
carry the party label. In representative democracies,
parties are the principle organizations that recruit
candidates for public office, run candidates against the
candidates of other political parties in competitive
elections, and try to organize and coordinate the activities
of government officials under party banners.
Observers disagree about the value of political parties to
democratic government. The Founders, for instance, were
generally critical of parties, even the rudimentary and ill-
formed parties of their own day. Progressives believed that
political parties were undemocratic and corrupt instruments
of political bosses, and created devices such as the direct
primary (in which party candidates are chosen by voters
rather than the party leaders) and nonpartisan elections
(elections without party labels) to reduce the influence of
parties.
Today, public opinion polls show that a majority of Americans
are highly skeptical about politicians and political parties,
and remain uncertain about the relationship between parties
and democracy. Nonetheless, some Americans agree with political scientist E.E. Schattschneider who said that
"modern democracy is unthinkable save in terms of parties."
Parties are essential for majority rule. Elections create an
incentive for parties to assemble as many voters as possible,
with a majority being the optimal goal. To win elections,
parties must first mobilize and activate their natural
supporters, i.e., those who share their core goals and
values. Parties must also move beyond their core supporters
to attract a broad range of voters.
In order to increase their electoral appeal, parties usually
try to put together broad-based group coalitions. This process contributes to the formation of majorities where none
may have existed before.
Parties perform various roles in American society. Parties
can make majority preferences effective by simplifying ballot
choices for voters. It doesn't make sense for most people to
spend much time on politics. For them, voting cues provided
by party labels are helpful. Competition between political
parties can increase public awareness of, and interest in,
candidates and issues. Political parties can also be the
glue that holds together the various and sundry offices of
government, giving unity and direction to the actions of
officeholders.
Finally, parties can help make officeholders more
accountable. When things go wrong or promises are not kept,
it is important in a democracy for citizens to know who is
responsible. Political parties, therefore, allow for collective responsibility. Citizens can pass judgment on
the governing ability of a party as a whole and decide
whether to retain the incumbent party or throw it out of
office. For each of these reasons, parties are important to
majority rule.
III. The Two-Party System
Although the U.S. political party system shares certain
characteristics with other political party systems around the
world, it is unique in some essential ways. The U.S., for
example, comes closer to having a pure two-party system than
any other nation in the world. Most countries have either
one-party systems or multiparty systems. In the U.S., two
parties have dominated the political scene since 1836, and
the Democrats and the Republicans have controlled the
presidency and Congress since 1858.
Moreover, competition on the national level between the two
dominant parties in races for Congress and the White House
has been remarkably close since the end of the Civil War.
(Although the U.S. is a two-party system at the national evel, it is often a different story at the regional, state,
and local levels. From the end of the Civil War
to the 1960s, for instance, the deep South was solidly
Democratic, devoid of serious party competition.)
We can delineate at least five or six distinct party systems or stages of party development in the United States. The
first party system featured competition between Federalists nd Democratic Republicans. Although the Founders were
hostile to parties in theory, they created them almost immediately. Alexander Hamilton persuaded sympathetic
members of Congress to form a loosely organized party that
eventually took the name Federalist.
The Federalists, being close to New England and New York
merchant and banking interests, favored a policy of trade and
good relations with Great Britain, despite Great Britain's
policy of preying on American shipping in the Atlantic. The
Federalists also called for protective tariffs, a national
bank, and federal assumption of revolutionary war debts.
In opposition to the Federalists, Thomas Jefferson, James
Madison, and others formed a party in Congress known as the
Democratic Republicans, which took the opposite stance from
the Federalists on most issues. The split between the two
parties was widened by their bitter debate over the new
revolutionary government in France, with Jefferson and the
Democrat Republicans favorable to it, and the Federalists
hostile (though officially neutral).
The political fortunes of the two parties waxed and waned.
The Federalists captured full control of government after the
election of Federalist John Adams as president in 1796. In
1800, however, Thomas Jefferson, the Democratic Republican
presidential candidate, campaigned against the unpopular
Alien and Sedition Acts and won the presidency.
Jefferson's victory was only the first of a string of
spectacular successes by Democratic Republican presidential
candidates. The Federalists became tainted by their
sympathies with Great Britain in an anti-British era, their
attempt to take New England out of the Union during the War
of 1812, and their inability to transform themselves from a
party of the wealthy in an age when democracy was gaining
popularity. They quickly disappeared. By 1816, the first
two-party system had evolved into a one-party or no-party
system, generally known as the "Era of Good Feelings."
The second party system consisted of competition between the
Democrats and the Whigs. The nonparty system that prevailed
during the 1820s gave way to a strong two-party system by the
1830s. The Democrats (formally the Democratic Republicans)
and the Whigs were parties of a different sort from those in
the first party system. Instead of being loosely organized
groups of local dignitaries and public officials, the parties
that emerged in the 1830s were well-organized, with sharply
contrasting programs tied to a highly partisan electorate.
This was brought about, in part, by a significant
democratization of American life. Many barriers to voting by
adult white males were lifted and some states passed laws
requiring the direct popular election of presidential
electors, taking the process out of the hands of the state
legislatures. The Whigs favored a protective tariff, a
national bank, and a federal program of internal improvements
(roads, canal, etc.). In contrast, the Democrats, under the
leadership of Andrew Jackson, opposed all three of the Whig
proposals, couching their arguments in terms of the common
people versus the wealthy.
Both the Whigs and the Democrats were torn by the conflict
over slavery. The Whig party simply disintegrated and
disappeared, although some of its remnants formed the new
Republican Party (the ancestor of the present-day
Republicans). The Democrats survived but could not agree on
a single candidate to run against Republican Abraham Lincoln
in 1860, so each wing of the party nominated its
own candidate.
During the third party system, which lasted from the Civil
War to 1896, the Republicans and Democrats fought on roughly
even terms. The Democratic party was primarily a white
southern party, though Catholics and many workers in northern
urban areas supported it as well. In the meantime, the
Republican party became a party of business, the middle
class, and newly enfranchised blacks.
The late nineteenth century was a time of very rapid
transformation of the American economy and society, with
massive disruptions in the fabric of everyday life. Farmers
and industrial workers were especially hard hit, and they
responded with social protest movements. Many of these
movements, particularly the Populist Movement, ran candidates
in election campaigns who garnered a great number of votes.
The Populist Movement managed to create an alliance of black
and white small farmers in many of the states of the deep
South, posing a threat to the area's traditional
leadership
In 1896, the Populist party joined with the Democratic party
to nominate a single candidate for the presidency, the
charismatic orator William Jennings Bryan, who urged free
coinage of silver to help debtors with cheaper currency
(which also pleased silver mining companies). The threat of
a radical agrarian party, joining blacks and whites, farmers
and unionists, proved to be too much for many Americans and
contributed to one of the most bitter electoral campaigns in
U.S. history.
Conservative Democrats deserted their party to join the
Republicans. Businesses worried about the dangers of a
Populist-Democratic victory and contributed heavily to the campaign of the Republican candidate, William McKinley. The
Republicans won handily and dominated American politics until
the Great Depression. A final important consequence of this
period of American politics was that the states of the deep South, using both law and intimidation, removed blacks from
the electorate.
The election of 1896 began the fourth party system which was
a thirty-six year stretch of Republican dominance.
Republicans controlled Congress and the White House
throughout most of the period. The major exception to
Republican control was the presidency of Democrat Woodrow
Wilson who won election because the Republican party was
divided.
The fifth party system, which is called the New Deal party
system, was a period dominated by the Democratic party. The
Great Depression, the New Deal, and the leadership of
President Franklin D. Roosevelt fundamentally changed the
conception of the proper role of the federal government, the
groups aligned with each of the two parties, and the relative
balance of power in the country between the Democrats and
Republicans.
During the forty years from 1932 to 1972, the Democrats won
seven of eleven presidential elections, enjoyed control of
the Senate and House of Representatives for all but four
years, and controlled a substantial majority of governorships nd state legislatures across the nation. The Democrats also
enjoyed a large lead over the Republicans in party
identification among the electorate and were supported by a
broad coalition of groups. By the middle of the 1930s,
workers, Catholics, Jews, unionists, small and medium-sized
farmers, people in urban areas, white ethnics, Southerners,
and blacks were firmly in the Democratic party camp.
Some observers characterize the current party system as a
post-New Deal party system. After the stunning Reagan
victories in 1980 and 1984, many people thought that the
United States might be in the midst of another major
realignment, with a transition to a new party system
dominated by the Republican party. It is not clear, however,
that such a change has occurred or is likely to occur.
Although the New Deal Democratic coalition is slowly coming
unglued, what has taken its place is not yet clear. The
present system is not like traditional ones, in which one
party controlled the government, led in party identification
among the electorate, dominated the states, and defined the
public agenda. The Republican party dominates the presidency
Today, but Democrats retain a strangle hold on Congress,
state legislatures, and governorships. Nor have the
Republicans been able to convince a majority of Americans to
identify with their party.
Finally, there has been no wholesale substitution of one
policy agenda for another, as in past realignment periods.
Despite the Reagan Revolution, the American public has yet to
reject the dominant issues of the New Deal party system and
adopt an alternative issue agenda. Some scholars use the
term dealignment to characterize the current party system,
ocusing on the decreasing tendency of Americans to care
about parties at all.
In the history of the two-party system in the United States,
we see five relatively stable periods, each stretching over
30 or 40 years, linked to one another by much shorter periods
of realignment in which a new party system takes the place of
the old. The new party system differs from the old in a
variety of ways, even when the name of the parties stay the
same. Party systems tend to differ from one another on the
issues that get attention, the party loyalties of voters, the
group foundations of the parties, and the policies of the
federal government.
Most political scientists agree that realignments are
triggered by the transformation of structural factors. They
occur when the old party system is unable to accommodate or
solve problems that develop during rapid social, economic,
and cultural change. Political scientists disagree, however,
about how realignment takes place.
Most believe that it involves the movement of blocs of voters
from one party to another and the entrance of new voters into
the electorate. During realignment, citizens are unhappy
about the course of affairs in the nation and express
themselves either by switching their party allegiance or by
voting in higher proportions than in the past.
Other political scientists, however, believe that realignment
is best explained by shifts in the behavior of major
investors, especially business groups. The New Deal party
system, they argue, was less a product of shifts among voters
than it was the formation of a new coalition of business
interests who wanted free trade and were willing to back
social reforms in exchange.
Such a viewpoint suggests that voters eventually follow the
lead of major investors, who define the issues, pose the
alternatives, and fund parties and candidates. According to
this interpretation, changes in partisan identification and
voting behavior in the electorate are not the cause of
realignment, but an effect.
Why does the United States have a two-party system when most
other western democracies have multiparty systems? The
answer to this question is best explained by an examination
of electoral rules, restrictions on minority parties, and
popular attitudes toward parties.
First, let's consider election laws. Most other democratic
nations elect their representatives on the basis of
proportional representation. Each party is represented in
the legislative branch of government in rough proportion to its percentage of the popular vote in an election. Even
parties who have only a narrow appeal can win a proportion of
the popular vote. Voters with strong views on an issue or
with strong ideological outlooks can vote for a party that
closely represents their views. A vote for a small party is
not wasted, because it would ultimately be translated into
legislative seats and perhaps a place in the governing
coalition.
Elections in the United States, however, are organized on a
plurality or winner-take-all, single-member-district basis.
Each electoral district in the United States, whether it is
an urban ward, a county, a congressional district, or a
state, generally elects only one person to a given office and
does so on the basis of whoever wins the most votes. This
arrangement creates a powerful incentive for parties to
coalesce and for voters to concentrate their attention on big parties.
From the vantage point of party organizations, this type of
election discourages minor-party efforts, because failure to
win a plurality leaves such a party with no representation at
all. Leaders of minor parties are tempted to merge with a
major party. From the voter's point of view, a single
member, winner-take-all election means that a vote for a minority party is wasted. Those who vote for a minority
party may feel good, but voters have few illusions that such
votes will translate into representation.
The effect of the American form of election is accentuated by
the fact that the main prize in our political system--the
presidency--is elected in a single gigantic district: the
nation.
Second, election laws that restrict the activities of minor
parties help account for the two-party system. Once a party
system is in place, the dominant parties often establish
rules that make it difficult for other parties to get on the
ballot. The way in which the federal government partially
funds presidential campaigns has made the situation of third
parties even more difficult.
Major-party candidates for president automatically qualify
for federal funding once they are nominated. In contrast,
minor party candidates must attract a minimum percentage of
the votes in the general election to be eligible for public
funding. They are, furthermore, not reimbursed until after
the election. Moreover, the television networks are no
longer obliged to give equal time to parties other than the
Republicans and Democrats because the Federal Communication Commission's equal time policy and fairness doctrine have
been suspended.
Third, the attitudes of the American people contribute to the
maintenance of a two-party system. Once a party system is in
place, it seems natural. This attitude is passed on to
children by family, schools, and the media. Moreover, the
American political culture does not provide fertile ground
for a broad range of ideological distinctive parties. The
broad consensus on classical liberalism allows little space
for parties outside the consensus.
Finally, the absence of a strong labor movement is another
reason that a broad range of parties does not exist in the
United States. In most Western European nations, a strong
labor movement was instrumental in the creation of Socialist
and Labor political parties. The United States lacks both
the traditional conservative party groupings that grew out of
feudalism and a strong labor movement.
Minor parties have played a less important role in the United
States than in virtually any other democratic nation. In our
entire history, only a single minor party (the Republican
party) has managed to replace one of the major parties.
Several types of minor parties have played a part in American
politics throughout the years. Protest parties have usually
been a part of a protest movement. For example, the American
party was against immigration, the Populist movement against
monopolistic practices of the banking and railroad industry, and the American Independence party against federal activism
in civil rights.
Ideological parties such as the Socialist party, Communist
party, and Libertarian party have existed for years in the
United States but none have had a significant electoral
impact.
Single issue parties are barely distinguishable from interest
groups, though they do run their own candidates for public
office. Examples of these parties include the Women's party
and the Free Soil Party.
Splinter parties form when a faction within one of the major
political parties bolts to run its own candidate for
president. Examples of these type of parties include the
Bull Moose party and the Dixiecrats. Although the role of
minor parties is not clear, it can be said that they allow
those with grievances to express themselves in a way that is
not possible within the major parties.
More cynical observers suggest that this allows unhappy
groups to blow off steam without seriously disturbing the
normal political process or threatening those holding public
office. Most observers agree, however, that because minor
parties are not usually as cautious as major parties, they
probably expand the scope of conflict in American politics,
increase attention and interest among at least some segments
of the public, and bring a few more Americans into the
political process.
IV. The Parties as Organizations
American political parties differ organizationally from
parties in other democracies. In most democratic countries,
parties are fairly well-structured organizations, led by
party professionals, and committed to a set of policies and
principles. They also tend to have clearly defined
membership requirements, centralized control over party nominations and electoral financing, and discipline over
party members holding political office.
None of this is true for major parties in the U.S. The
classic boss-led political machines of American folklore have
disappeared from the cities and states where they once
existed, mainly the result of reforms that ended party
control over government contracts and jobs. Even the most
popular presidents have trouble controlling members of their
own party. The vagueness of party membership is a good
indicator of the insubstantial nature of our parties.
American don't join parties in the sense of paying dues and
receiving a membership card. To Americans, being a member of
a party may mean nothing more than voting most of the time
for the candidate of that party.
American political parties are not organizations in the
formal sense of the term. In contrast to corporate CEOs or
party leaders in most other countries, the leaders of
American political parties cannot issue orders that get
passed along a chain of command to those at the bottom. In
the U.S., each level of the party is relatively independent
and only acts in concert with other levels on the basis of
common interests.
There are only a few ways in which the American parties can
compel one level of organization to do the bidding of
another. Most important, the national party is unable to
control its most vital activity: the nomination of candidates
running under its party label.
The national party conventions, which are the governing
bodies of American parties, have some authority to encourage
coordination and cooperation among levels. Convention
delegates meet every four years, not only to nominate
presidential and vice-presidential candidates, but also to
adopt a party platform and revise party rules. Although the
national convention is the formal governing body for each of
the parties, it cannot directly dictate to party candidates
and party organizations at other levels.
The business of the party is conducted during the years
between the national conventions by a national committee made
up of elected committee members from each of the states. The
real business of the committee is conducted by the
chairperson and his or her staff. The chairperson exercises
little power when a president from his or her party is in
office, but when the other party controls the presidency, the
party chairperson exercises more influence in party affairs.
Congressional campaign committees are an entirely independent
arm of the parties which help members of Congress campaign
for reelection. These committees are controlled by party
members in Congress, not the party chairperson, the national
committees, or even the president.
Finally, there are a wide range of affiliated groups
associated with the parties, such as organizations for women
and young people, research groups, and policy and ideological
reform groups. Each of these affiliated groups is free to go
its own way; the national parties have limited power to shape
their actions.
In most other democracies, candidates are less important than
parties. Party organizations draw up party lists and
candidates cannot force themselves on the ballot. Most money
for conducting electoral campaigns is raised and spent by the
party organizations, not individual candidates. The campaign is waged between parties and their alternative programs, not
between individual candidates, and the electorate tends to
make choices based on feelings about the parties rather than
candidates.
In contrast, American politics is candidate centered. The
weakness of our parties as organizations is most apparent in
their inability to select and channel the activities of those
who run for public office under the party banner.
In most parliamentary systems, candidates are beholden to the
party. Parties select candidates, are responsible for most
of a candidate's campaign financing, and strongly influence
their behavior once in office. In the United States, the
opposite is true. Candidates are primary and the parties are
secondary in the sense that party activities are shaped by
the electoral needs of their candidates. Today, nominations
are increasingly slipping out of the grasp of party regulars nd officials. Nominees are so independent that they
sometimes oppose party leaders and reject traditional party
policies.
Obviously, parties want to win election, but for what
purpose? That's not as easy to answer as it may seem, given
the fragmentation and complexity of party organizations.
Each component tends to have its own goals.
Party activists, the people who do the most important
organizational work of the parties, are themselves divided.
Party professionals are the traditional party activists whose
first commitment is to the party itself. They tend to be pragmatic, oriented to winning elections. Issues and
ideology are less important to them than finding candidates
who can appeal to as many voters as possible.
Party amateurs are party activists who tend to be motivated
by ideological or issue concerns. Although they are
interested in finding a winning candidate, these amateurs
often want candidates to conform to their ideological or
issue agenda.
Party officeholders, meanwhile, first and foremost want to
retain their positions or gain higher office, and they
generally behave with an eye on the next election. Party
voters are difficult to pigeonhole. They are a diverse lot;
some want ideological and issue purity, while others seeks
party victory as their main goal.
Finally, financial contributors have diverse goals as well.
Most large contributors are interested mainly in either
gaining access to officeholders or trying to influence
legislation and thus are usually attracted to popular
candidates.
The Republican and Democratic parties are both coalitions
seeking to attract as many individuals and groups as possible
in order to prevail in winner-take-all, single-member-
district elections. Thus, there are strong pressures on them
to be ideologically ambiguous. Ideology may be understood as
an organized set of beliefs about the fundamental nature of
the good society and the role government ought to play in
achieving it.
In other Western democracies, it is common for the major
parties to be aligned closely with an ideology. Ideological
contests in the United States, however, are not the norm. By
and large, Democrats and Republicans believe in the same
ideological fundamentals. Both parties are committed to the
Constitution, the Bill of Rights, free enterprise, and
individualism. It may be most accurate to say that our
parties are ideological--people in them believe in a coherent
set of ideas about the nature of the good society, economy,
and polity--but that they are not ideologically opposed to
one another.
Does the absence of ideological differences between the two
parties mean that there isn't that much difference between
the Democrats and Republicans? The evidence indicates that
the difference between Democrats and Republicans are real and
important. The two parties disagree on the details of public
policy, even if they agree on fundamental values and
objectives. It is possible to agree on the value of
individualism, for example, yet disagree about the scale of
the federal government's role in providing social welfare.
The Republican and Democratic parties differ in a number of ways. The electorate perceives the parties differently. A
recent study shows that over sixty percent of the American
people report that they see the parties as different on a
whole range of issues.
The parties also differ in terms of who supports them.
Americans who classify themselves as liberals overwhelmingly
support Democratic candidates, while self-described
conservatives overwhelmingly support Republicans.
Another way that the parties differ is in terms of their
party platforms. Scholars have noted persistent differences
between the parties in terms of rhetoric, issues,
public policies, and pledges made.
However, it is important to note that the Republican and Democratic platforms tend to overlap more than they diverge.
Party activists differ, with Republicans activists being more
conservative than Republican voters and Democratic activists
being more liberal than Democratic voters. Finally, the
parties differ in the voting behavior of their elected
representatives. Republicans and Democrats in office favor
different policies on taxes, corporate legislation, and
welfare.
Many people believe that the parties are becoming more
ideological. This is particularly true for the Republican
party. After the 1970s, the Republican party became far more
conservative. The Democratic party still contains large
segments of conservative leaders and voters, thus ideological
diversity, and ideological ambiguity as a party, remain the
watchwords for Democrats.
America's fragmented system of government sometimes produces
policy deadlock. One of the roles that political parties can
play is to overcome this deadlock by persuading officials in
the different branches of government to cooperate with one
another on the basis of party loyalty.
The constitutionally designed conflict between president and
Congress might be bridged, for example, when a single party
controls both branches. The problem of governing presented
by fragmented and separated powers in the United States is
almost unique among the Western democracies.
In most parliamentary systems (as in Great Britain, Germany,
and Japan), the executive and legislative branches are
combined. American political parties only partially improve
the coherence and responsiveness of our government. Because
they are organizationally weak and ideologically ambiguous
American parties are unable to command the complete loyalty
and attention of their adherents or to influence strongly
their behavior. Nonetheless, American parties are sometimes
able to overcome constitutional deadlock, as in the case of
FDR's New Deal and Lyndon Johnson's Great Society programs.
Divided party control of the national government exaggerates
the problems caused by the constitutional separation of
powers. At best, divided party control leads to government
paralysis, stalemate, and delay. At worst, divided party control of government produces open warfare between the two
branches--what some political scientists have called
institutional combat. This involves an effort by one branch
of government to diminish another and build its own
autonomous power to govern.
Parties are not only organizations and officeholders; they
are also images in the minds of voters and potential voters,
mental cues that affect the behavior of the electorate. It
is important to note that partisanship is declining within
the electorate. Americans are less prone to identify with
one of the two main parties now than they were in the past.
They are also more likely to vote for candidates of different
parties.
This decline in party allegiance is not so much a reflection
of public hostility to parties as it shows a lack of
confidence that parties can make the government responsive
and responsible to the people. If parties were not important
to the practices of democracy, none of this would be cause
for concern. Given the centrality to popular sovereignty to
democracy, however, the decline of partisanship is very
important.
V. Party Decline and Reform
The evidence indicates that parties are indeed declining in
their popularity among the electorate and in their ability to
control central party functions such as nominating candidates
and organizing campaigns. Many political scientists contend that the decline of parties will lead to an increase in the
influence of interest groups.
Parties are the closest thing we have to an institution
capable of fashioning policy coherence out of interest group
politics, while at the same time bringing broad elements of
the public into the political arena. If parties continue to
decline, national policy will lack coherence because weak
parties will be unable effectively to aggregate the competing
demands of interest groups.
Moreover, the decline of parties will diminish the political
influence of the worst-off members of society who will lack
the resources to fund interest group activity. If this
should develop, political equality will be eroded further.
Scholars disagree as to whether measures should be taken to
strengthen parties. The most elaborate and extensive set of
proposals for reform of the parties is that which calls for
responsible-party government in the United States.
Proponents of this model want a party system that resembles
the parliamentary party systems of Western Europe, where
parties stand for clearly defined programs, compete against
other parties with distinctive stands, put their programs
into effect once in office, and face the voters based on
their performance. Such a system, its adherents contend,
would make elections more meaningful.
Structural factors prevent the responsible party model from
being realized in the U.S. Constitutional rules virtually
guarantee that American parties will be fragmented and
decentralized. American political culture has long been
anti-party and hostile to the concentration of political
power. The absence of an organized labor party in America is
another factor contributing to a lack of appeal for a
responsible party system. Finally, there is no wide-spread
public support for strengthening American parties.
Even if creating responsible parties were possible,
proponents are vague about leadership in these strengthened
parties and the mechanisms by which party ideologies and
platforms are fashioned. Though parties of the sort
described in the responsible-party model are both unlikely to
appear and problematic in several respects, the present
decline of the parties must be reversed if they are to play a
role in making popular sovereignty a reality.