Reforming the Presidential Nominating Process Front-Loading's Consequences and the National Primary Solution Routledge Research in American Politics and Governance Series
The 2020 presidential selection process is already underway. As the political parties finalize their nominating rules and the states jostle for an advantageous contest date, potential challengers are being identified and sized up by party insiders. Once again, media and popular attention will be disproportionately focused on the candidates? performance in the first and earliest of the state nominating contests?and on how quickly the sequence of primaries and caucuses winnows the field and identifies the presumptive nominees. But what are the implications of a sequential and front-loaded nominating calendar that gives some voters outsized influence while leaving many others with a constrained choice?or no choice?in the selection of their party?s presidential nominee?
Reforming the Presidential Nominating Process: Front-Loading's Consequences and the National Primary Solution critiques the contemporary nominating process from the perspective of voters and their right to effectively participate in their parties? selection of a presidential nominee. Employing both a common-sense and legal, rights-based framework to invite a constitutionally grounded conversation on the legitimacy of the current presidential nominating process, Lisa K. Parshall argues that timing of participation in the nomination goes hand-in-hand with the right to choose a candidate and the fairest way to restore the promise of meaningful and timely participation for all voters is by adopting a same-day national primary.
Viewed from the party membership perspective, this work illuminates the fundamental interests at stake that should be considered in any potential reform of the presidential nominating system.
Introduction: The Myth of Full, Timely, and Equal Participation in the Presidential Nominating Process1. The Path to the Contemporary Nominating Process 2. The 2008 Nominations: Déjá Vu All Over Again 3. The 2012 Nominations: Reverting to Script 4. The 2016 Nominations: The Same Old Story with Unexpected Twists 5. The Inequalities and Ambiguities of Party Membership 6. Framing a Rights-Based Argument for Party Members’ Rights 7. The National Primary Solution
Lisa K. Parshall is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Daemen College in Amherst, New York, specializing in American Politics, Public Law, and Public Policy. She has served as an officer for the New York State and Northeastern Political Science Associations, as an Advisor for Vote Smart, and is a Richard P. Nathan Public Policy Fellow at the Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, New York (2018–2019).
Date de parution : 09-2020
15.2x22.9 cm
Date de parution : 06-2018
15.2x22.9 cm
Mots-clés :
Invisible Primary; Presidential Nominating Process; U.S; Politics; Delegate Allocation Rules; Presidential Nominations; Presumptive Nominee; Electoral Process; Delegate Selection; Nominations; Presidency; Nominating Process; Presidential Candidates; Nominating Contests; Presidential Primary; Pre-primary Period; Primaries; Unaffiliated Voters; Primary; Delegate Allocation; Voting; Precinct Caucuses; Voting Rights; Presidential Preference Primaries; Participatory Rights; Invisible Primary Stage; Politics Parties; Political Party; Wayne Steger; Presidential Primaries; Barbara Norrander; State Party Organizations; National Primary; Blanket Primary; Associational Rights; Winograd Commission; Absentee Voting; Nevada Caucuses; National Committee; Delegate Selection Process; Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum