Parties on the Ground
A Study of Nominations for the House of Representatives
University of Chicago Press
Will be published approx. on 28. September 2026
Book
Hardback
368 pages
978-0-226-85329-1 (ISBN)
Description
A close-up examination of the roots of congressional politics in nominations for the House of Representatives.
With most House seats all but guaranteed for one party in general elections, primary elections for party nominees often decide who goes to Congress. Yet primaries are notoriously difficult to study, due in part to both the variety of rules that govern them and the differences in the influence of local leaders. Based on wide-ranging evidence from field interviews to fundraising data to exit polls, Parties on the Ground overcomes these challenges to take readers under the hood for an in-depth look at the nomination process.
Although progressive reformers sought the adoption of primaries to empower voters' control over nominations, Parties on the Ground finds that most voters pay too little attention to make use of the opportunity. Instead, the most important actors are intense policy demanders-such as interest groups and activist organizations-who supply campaign resources to some candidates and deny them to others. These groups care most about securing an agent for their own interests and values; to this end, they put serious effort into vetting candidates and often coordinate among themselves or with local parties in support of their choices. At the same time, competition between establishment and insurgent groups can be high, especially in the Republican Party. Developing a nuanced account of House nominations in today's parties, Parties on the Ground offers a host of new insights into this understudied but significant piece of the puzzle of American politics.
With most House seats all but guaranteed for one party in general elections, primary elections for party nominees often decide who goes to Congress. Yet primaries are notoriously difficult to study, due in part to both the variety of rules that govern them and the differences in the influence of local leaders. Based on wide-ranging evidence from field interviews to fundraising data to exit polls, Parties on the Ground overcomes these challenges to take readers under the hood for an in-depth look at the nomination process.
Although progressive reformers sought the adoption of primaries to empower voters' control over nominations, Parties on the Ground finds that most voters pay too little attention to make use of the opportunity. Instead, the most important actors are intense policy demanders-such as interest groups and activist organizations-who supply campaign resources to some candidates and deny them to others. These groups care most about securing an agent for their own interests and values; to this end, they put serious effort into vetting candidates and often coordinate among themselves or with local parties in support of their choices. At the same time, competition between establishment and insurgent groups can be high, especially in the Republican Party. Developing a nuanced account of House nominations in today's parties, Parties on the Ground offers a host of new insights into this understudied but significant piece of the puzzle of American politics.
Reviews / Votes
"Parties on the Ground will change the way people think about American elections. Using rich qualitative data from hundreds of in-depth interviews, this book reveals that long before voters choose from the candidates on the ballot, interest groups and party leaders jostle over who those candidates will be. These highly local political processes are mostly invisible to voters but are an important, understudied part of American democracy." -- Sarah Anzia | author of "Local Interests: Politics, Policy, and Interest Groups in US City Governments" A sobering and persuasive look at whether primary elections serve the democratizing purposes for which they were designed. Based on extensive interviewing and close examination of 55 winnable open seat Congressional races, the authors explore the critical ways that interest various groups shape primary outcomes and contemplate what that means for political representation in the US." -- Bruce Cain | Stanford University "Congressional primaries are enormously important as they effectively determine the winner in a large majority of districts-yet they're often understudied. These detailed case studies provide a host of new insights into the nomination process that will shape future research on parties, interest groups, and other electoral processes. Parties on the Ground represents a major, indeed a landmark contribution to the literature on congressional elections." -- Gary C. Jacobson | author of "Presidents and Parties in the Public Mind"More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Chicago
United States
Publishing group
The University of Chicago Press
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
6 halftones, 23 tables
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-226-85329-1 (9780226853291)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Kathleen Bawn is professor of political science at the University of California, Los Angeles. Knox Brown is assistant professor of political science at Tulsa Community College. Angela X. Ocampo is assistant professor in the Department of Mexican American and Latina/o Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. Shawn Patterson, Jr., is a research analyst at the Annenberg Public Policy Center. John L. Ray is the Senior Director of Polling at YouGov Blue. John Zaller is professor of political science, emeritus at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Content
Preface
Chapter 1. The Vocabulary of the People
Chapter 2. "Politicians There Will Always Be"
Chapter 3. What Do Groups Want?
Chapter 4. Vetting and Vouching
Chapter 5. Coordination
Chapter 6. Anchoring
Chapter 7. Voters
Chapter 8. Candidate-Centered Politics
Chapter 9. Republican Insurgency
Chapter 10. Who Gets Represented?
Chapter 11. Parties on the Ground
Epilogue. House Nominations Since 2014
Online Appendix
Notes
References
Index
Chapter 1. The Vocabulary of the People
Chapter 2. "Politicians There Will Always Be"
Chapter 3. What Do Groups Want?
Chapter 4. Vetting and Vouching
Chapter 5. Coordination
Chapter 6. Anchoring
Chapter 7. Voters
Chapter 8. Candidate-Centered Politics
Chapter 9. Republican Insurgency
Chapter 10. Who Gets Represented?
Chapter 11. Parties on the Ground
Epilogue. House Nominations Since 2014
Online Appendix
Notes
References
Index