By Invitation Only: The Rise of Exclusive Politics in the United States
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By Invitation Only - Steven E. Schier
By Invitation Only
THE RISE OF EXCLUSIVE POLITICS IN THE UNITED STATES
Steven E. Schier
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH PRESS
Published by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15261
Copyright © 2000, University of Pittsburgh Press
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
Printed on acid-free paper
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Schier, Steven E.
By invitation only : the rise of exclusive politics in the United States / Steven E. Schier.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8229-5712-4 (pbk. : acid-free paper) — ISBN 0-8229-4109-0 (cloth : acid-free paper)
1. Political particpation—United States. 2. Political parties—United States. 3. Pressure groups—United States. 4. Lobbying—United States. 5. Electioneering—United States. I. Title.
JK1764.S36 2000
324'0973'09049—dc21
99–050620
ISBN-13: 978-0-8229-7205-1 (electronic)
for Mary
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Rise of Activation Strategies
2. The Great Disintegration: From Partisan Mobilization to Activation
3. Candidates, Parties, and Electoral Activation
4. Interest Organizations and Electoral Activation
5. Interest Organizations and Government: Lobbying by Activation
6. From Activation to Inclusion
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Two scholars deserve praise for clarifying this book’s purpose. John Green of the Ray Bliss Center at the University of Akron first suggested the term activation as a contrast to mobilization and helped me sharpen the conceptual differences between the two terms. My colleague Norman Vig at Carleton College drew my attention to the ubiquity of activation strategies in contemporary American politics. The thesis of this book emerged from their seminal contributions. I must also thank John J. Coleman of the University of Wisconsin—Madison, G. Calvin Mackenzie and L. Sandy Maisel of Colby College, Burdett Loomis of the University of Kansas, Rich Keiser at Carleton College, and several anonymous reviewers for also helping me develop my argument. During my time directing Carleton’s Washington program in the fall of 1997, I was able personally to interview many leading national lobbyists, who shared many insights into their part of the activation game. Carleton students helped me at every step of the way as well. My two research assistants, Justin Magouirk and Tonya Mykleby, provided extraordinary assistance. Justin researched the scholarly literature on turnout with an acumen usually demonstrated only by the very best graduate students. Tonya’s very thoughtful and substantive comments on each chapter significantly improved their contents. Both will have outstanding careers as political scientists, should they care to join the discipline. (Message to both: political science needs you!) Thanks also to Niels Aaboe of the University of Pittsburgh Press for his unfailing support along the way.
Mary, Anna, and Teresa endured my months of preoccupation with this project and gave me the best possible recreation when I was away from it. Their love and support provided the most important element in my completion of this book.
Northfield, Minnesota
August 1999
Introduction
American politics has become a politics of exclusive invitations. Political parties, organized interests, and candidates for office all strive to prevail in elections and policy-making by motivating carefully targeted segments of the public to vote or press demands upon elected officials. In the process, a large segment of the public—about half—receive little invitation or inducement to participate in our politics. Despite our public reverence for democratic participation, the bleak reality of American politics falls far short of the ideal. What brought us to this point? The causes are many. The decay of political parties, the rise of new political technologies, and the evolution of an increasingly user-unfriendly electoral system created perverse incentives for political elites. In recent decades, parties, interests, and campaigns have discovered what has become the most efficient way to succeed in elections and policy making. That way involves activation—identifying and activating the small segments of citizens most likely to get their message
and vote or lobby government. The cost and risk of reaching out to all citizens is increasingly irrational for these elites. Providing exclusive invitations is the rational way to political success.
This book addresses three audiences. One is the professional audience of political scientists. They will find here a review of a broad literature concerning political parties, interest groups, campaigns and elections, political behavior, and normative and empirical democratic theory. It is organized around a theoretical argument about how and why activation, the politics of exclusive targeting, differs from the inclusive partisan mobilization practiced by American parties in the nineteenth century. Political elites’ contemporary use of activation strategies results from the advent of new incentives for them as rational actors, a central insight of the new institutionalism
in the study of American politics. As the incentives changed for these actors, so did American politics. Elite interviews and documentary research concerning the activities of five major interest groups supplement the literature review and theoretical argument throughout this book.
Students of political science make up a second audience for the book. Many learn about particular problems in electoral politics and lobbying but may not be aware of their common roots. Many citizens don’t vote because no one invites them to participate. Candidates and parties conduct boring campaigns because they address their appeals to a small segment of the adult population. Money grows in political importance because it is essential to successful activation by parties, candidates, and interests. Groups proliferate because of the competitive threat of rival interests. Parties matter less because they have little claim on voters beyond that exercised by candidates and, increasingly, organized groups. These particular problems derive from the politics of activation. Teachers will find this book a useful addition to courses in parties, interest groups, elections, political behavior, empirical democratic theory, and American politics.
The broader group of politically aware citizens constitutes a third audience for the book. Here they can find an underlying explanation of several of the problems of America’s democratic politics, along with an assessment of possible reforms. Without an accurate diagnosis, attempted remedies are futile. Many voguish reforms, aimed at improving electoral and governmental politics, lack that accurate diagnosis. My final chapter, described below, assesses which reforms might actually create a more inclusive American politics.
THE ARGUMENT
Chapter 1 presents the main argument of the book. It first distinguishes activation, the finely targeted, exclusive method contemporary parties, interests, and campaigns employ to cultivate popular support, from the more inclusive electoral mobilization undertaken by political parties during the partisan era of the last century. Activation’s traits are revealed through reference to recent political science literature. The legitimating arguments of activation come from participatory democratic theory, which is oblivious to the problems of activation. At its root, activation arose as a rational response to a political environment characterized by party decline, a proliferation of organized interests, and new efficiencies in communication and campaign technologies. The result is a contemporary politics by invitation only.
Chapter 2 explains the disintegration of inclusive electoral politics resulting from the shift from partisan mobilization to contemporary activation. Old-style mobilization was inclusive because it involved simple partisan messages, communication by personal contact, social networks with strong voting norms, and adequate time for citizens to absorb the partisan message. Party strength in American politics declined due to a combination of structural reforms pressed by the progressive movement and changes in the national policy environment. As presidents gained power at the expense of Congress and as Congress made economic policy more automatic and less discretionary, voters came to view partisan control of government as less consequential to their personal livelihoods. The rise of television and new campaign technologies encouraged a further individualization of electoral campaigns.
Chapter 3 portrays the state of the art
activation practiced by contemporary political campaigns. In contrast to the era of partisan mobilization, candidates operate more individualistic campaigns with more expensive techniques and target the electorate much more carefully. Careful targeting becomes a strategic imperative for campaigns, given their limited financial resources. The chapter explains the central role of campaign consultants, the importance of negative advertising, and the variety of firms involved in selling candidates to voters. Political parties, once at the heart of election campaigns, now primarily supply money to help candidate-centered campaigns disseminate their individualistic messages. The chapter concludes by examining the crucial swing voters
that contemporary campaigns target for activation. The Clinton reelection campaign’s careful targeting of suburban swing voters reveals how activation biases its appeals toward relatively affluent citizens. The narrow focus of candidate messages in 1996 contrasts markedly with the broad-brush partisan messages of the last century.
Chapters 4 and 5 detail how the burgeoning number of interest organizations energetically employ activation techniques in political campaigns and governmental lobbying. Chapter 4 portrays the many avenues of interest influence in the electoral arena. Interest organizations are defined and their campaign strategies identified. These include gathering information, raising funds, contributing money to candidates and parties, and activating grassroots membership. The successful grassroots mobilization of the Christian Coalition in 1994 receives particular attention, as does initiative politics in California. The initiative, once touted as a hallmark of participatory democracy, has decayed into an arena dominated by well-funded interests that try to direct public policy through clever advertising.
Chapter 5, the second chapter focusing on activation by interest organizations, examines their activities in lobbying government. The increasing use of outside
lobbying strategies, in which interests activate fragments of the public to put direct pressure on legislatures, receives attention. Interests also use a variety of activation tactics to recruit and keep members. The chapter concludes with several case studies of successful interest organizations that explain how the organizations successfully recruit members, activate them for lobbying, and influence election campaigns. The grand result of interest lobbying is a proliferation of narrow, particular demands on the governmental agenda rather than consistent governmental attention to identify and address majority preferences.
Chapter 6 assesses reforms that might produce more mobilization and less activation in American politics. Electoral rules seem a more promising means of reform than do changes in national economic policy. Dramatic changes in economic policy that will make parties and elections more important to the public seem highly unlikely. The goal of reform must be simpler and more decisive elections, requiring a stronger party role in elections and more incentives for citizens to vote. Recent campaign finance reform measures threaten a counterproductive result by weakening the ability of parties to raise and spend funds in elections. Ultimately, only more sweeping changes can restore mobilization. Mandatory voting and a partisan ballot are most likely to bring forth a fresh form of partisan mobilization. Other nations with these procedures have more decisive and inclusive elections than does the United States. We can learn from their examples and bring the entire public back into electoral politics.
CHAPTER 1
The Rise of Activation Strategies
The critical element for the health of a democratic order consists in the beliefs, standards and competence of those who constitute the influentials, the opinion-leaders, the political activists in the order. . . . If a democracy tends toward indecision, decay and disorder, the responsibility rests here, not with the mass of the people.
V. O. Key, Public Opinion and American Democracy
This book is about the distinction between two words. Their different meanings explain how America’s popular politics has changed for the worse over the last one hundred years. The first word is mobilization, defined here as the partisan method of stimulating very high turnout in elections during the period of peak party power that lasted from 1876 to 1892. The second word is activation, meaning the more contemporary methods that parties, interest groups, and candidates employ to induce particular, finely targeted portions of the public to become active in elections, demonstrations, and lobbying.
The two terms reveal very differing processes by which political elites engage the public. First, the two processes differ in their focus. The partisan mobilization of the past was inclusive, seeking to arouse all possible voters to vote in response to a direct partisan message. Activation, conversely, is exclusive by design. Candidates, interests, and consultants carefully identify those in the public most likely to become active on their behalf and then employ a variety of inducements to stimulate the action. New communication technology makes such microtargeting possible and allows elites to expend resources in arousing the public far more efficiently—and narrowly—than in the days of mobilization.
The two processes also differ in their agents, or sources of stimulation of the public. Mobilization was a heavily partisan process, dominated by strong party organizations and party messages. Politics centered on elections, and most voters viewed electoral choice as a partisan choice. In contrast, thousands of different organizations and individuals attempt activation today. Individual candidates now make their own personal appeals to an electorate uninterested in parties. A dizzying array of interest groups seeks to impart selective information and activism expertise to their potential supporters in the public. Parties still get out a message during elections, but it often gets lost in the competitive din of activation appeals.
The processes also differ in their method. Partisan mobilization involved broad appeals often carried through personal conversation with local party workers, or through America’s then highly partisan press. In contrast, activation is research-driven by polling and focus groups, allowing the activators to target precisely those most likely to respond to appeals. Activation employs telephones, direct mail, and Internet communication in a way that allows distinctively phrased messages of maximum possible impact. It does not seek to get most potential voters to participate in an election, as does mobilization, but instead fires up a small but potentially effective segment of the public to help a particular candidate at the polls or a particular interest as it lobbies government.
Finally, the processes differ in their impact on popular rule in America. Partisan mobilization encouraged heavy turnouts of eligible voters, most of whom cast a clear and decisive ballot for one of the two major parties in an election. A simple, direct, electoral verdict allowed for a relatively clear correspondence between the views of voters and the actions of government. Activation has no such representative function. It works to further the purposes of particular political elites during elections and when they lobby government, regardless of what most citizens think or desire. It is now possible for candidates, parties, and interests to rule without serious regard to majority preferences as expressed at the polls. Mobilization encouraged popular rule. Activation impedes it. Sadly, the rise of activation destroyed the prospects for majority rule in American politics.
The distinction between these two words is not helped by the indiscriminate use of the term mobilization by scholars of popular politics. They commonly label the partisan era of 1876–1892 as characterized by a very intense mobilization of the electorate
(Silbey 1998, 8). Yet, scholars also use mobilization to describe the contemporary politics of exclusive targeting. For example, Steven Rosenstone and John Mark Hansen assert, Intent on creating the greatest effect with the least effort, politicians, parties, interest groups, and activists mobilize people who are known to them, who are well placed in social networks, whose actions are effective, and who are likely to act
(Rosenstone and Hansen 1993, 33). This analysis perfectly describes the logic of contemporary activation, not the inclusive partisan mobilization of over a century ago.
By using the term mobilization indiscriminately, scholars miss the important distinctions, discussed above, between politics during the peak of the partisan era and politics today. The relationship of political elites to the public has shifted greatly in its focus, agency, method, and impact on popular politics. We need to recognize this more explicitly in the way we describe that relationship. Hence the need for the distinction between the two words, and the purpose of this book.
EXPLAINING PARADOXES
The decline of mobilization and the rise of activation explain many contemporary paradoxes of American politics. It is paradoxical that in an era when direct, participatory democracy seems ever more popular, the public is dismayed at its consequences. The popularity of what James Madison termed direct rule by the people
is everywhere evident. Polls reveal the public supports abolition of the undemocratic electoral college in selecting presidents. Direct policy-making by initiative and referendum thrives in many states (Cronin 1989, 51). Interest groups enjoy a great vogue as a means of popular participation, their number mushrooming in recent decades (Baumgartner and Leech 1998, 103). One might expect this wave of participation would produce greater popular content with government and its operations.
Not so. Certain forms of direct popular participation in government have become more fashionable, while popular disaffection from government has grown as well. Figure 1.1 charts the rise of interest groups in Washington and the growing number of Americans who believe government is controlled by a few large interests.
Why would this perception grow as the number of interest groups rose greatly and the number of Americans joining and active in groups grew as well? The interest group world of Washington in the mid-twentieth century indeed featured a few large interests
—big business, big labor, veterans’ organizations, and farm groups had far fewer rivals for access and influence than they have now (Baumgartner and Leech 1998, 110–11). Times have changed. A national survey in 1989 found that 79 percent of Americans are members of groups and 48 percent reported affiliation with a group that takes political stands (Verba, Scholzman, and Brady 1995, 63, 50). Today, groups ‘r’ us
(Rauch 1994, 48). Over a thousand corporate trade organizations, representing businesses ranging from the American Bankers Association to the Association of Dressings and Sauces, now have Washington headquarters. Environmental groups, virtually nonexistent in D.C. in 1950, are numerous and influential, including organizations such as the Friends of the Earth and the Sierra Club. The largest membership group represented in Washington today, the American Association of Retired Persons with thirty million members, did not even exist in 1950. The 1970s witnessed the proliferation of many public interest and social justice groups and movements, many still very active in Washington. In 1959, political scientist Charles Lindblom claimed that every important interest has its watchdog
in policy making (Lindblom 1959, 85). That is truer now than when he wrote it. Yet the public emphatically does not see it that way.
Figure 1.1 illustrates another paradox of our politics. Despite all this participatory effort, increasing proportions of Americans believe that elected officials do not care what they think. This perception collides with the scholarly picture of officeholders continually running scared
of popular opinion and attempting to be as responsive as possible (King 1997). Figure 1.2 adds a further dimension to this curious situation. Alongside the growth in groups and rising level of public education is a drooping trend in voter turnout. Political scientists have long held that higher education promotes a person’s likelihood of voting (Campbell et al. 1960; Nie, Junn, and Stehlik-Barry 1996). Rising education levels may stimulate group activity, but certainly not voting. Political scientists have sound explanations for the rise of interest groups and the decline of voting despite rising education levels, as future chapters make clear (Nie, Junn, and Stehlik-Barry 1996).
Figure 1.1 Increase in Groups and Public Alienation
Image: Figure 1.1 Increase in Groups and Public AlienationThe rise of activation strategies spawned the advent of these paradoxes. Although the American public has more political resources—in terms of education, at least—that should yield high electoral participation, citizens do not receive inclusive invitations to participate. Instead, an exclusive, invitation-only sort of targeting dominates American politics. The result: a more educated public that participates less, and the rise of popular alienation.
Political activists and operatives efficiently stimulate participation by the parts of the public most likely to become active for them given an appropriate stimulus. Campaigns target the undecided and less than firmly committed voters with ads and phone calls in the final weeks of an election campaign. Interest groups through phone and mail contact those members most likely to respond with activism. The message delivered through these strategies seeks to influence an incentive held dear by a political decision maker: reelection, or power over legislation, budgets, and policy implementation. The result is a complex and frequently tawdry battle among a multitude of national groups and officeholders. Richard Neustadt describes current Washington policy making as
Warfare among elites, waged since the 1960s in the name of causes, not compromises, fueled by technology, manned by consultants, rousing supporters by damning opponents, while serving the separate