Partisan priorities in this fractured system = make sure your party "wins",
often without regard to the cost to the country.  Statesmanship seems to be
dead and deeply buried.

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2014 11:37 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Partisan Priorities

 

 

Partisan Priorities - Patrick J.Egan

 


Publisher's Note


Americans consistently name Republicans as the party better at handling
issues like national security and crime, while they trust Democrats on
issues like education and the environment - a phenomenon called 'issue
ownership'. Partisan Priorities investigates the origins and consequences of
issue ownership, showing that in fact the parties deliver neither superior
performance nor popular policies on the issues they 'own'.


Reviews

 


"Partisan Priorities is a most important and welcome book that links 'issue
ownership' to larger questions of declining short-term democratic
responsiveness and increasing partisan polarization in the United States. It
is theoretically and empirically impressive, marshalling a wide array of
public opinion and other data and persuasively emphasizing the importance of
examining issues and behavior in the aggregate to understand the
significance of issue ownership in the American political system." - Robert
Y. Shapiro, Columbia University


 

Partisan Priorities is a provocative book that challenges our understanding
of how political parties and issues matter in American politics. At its
heart is a simple idea,

that party ownership of issues matters in American politics and that this
ownership is driven not by the policy positions parties take or their
performance on the issues while in government, but by the priorities parties
place on them. The idea turns out to be quite powerful. Egan carefully
crafts a measure of ownership based on public assessments of which party
would do a better job on various issues, and demonstrates that party
priorities drive public assessments. He then shows that this issue ownership
impacts politics and political representation in important ways. It is an
ambitious piece of work to be sure and deserves a wide audience among
scholars of American politics and beyond. Christopher Wlezien, University of
Texas at Austin

This book takes us far toward understanding the current dysfunction in
Washington. Using powerful tools and scrupulously even-handed analysis, Egan
shows that each party's priorities are driven by its office holders,
activists, and interest groups. The policy preferences of ordinary Americans
have little impact. Real reform will not happen until the hard lessons of
this book have been absorbed  Christopher H. Achen, Princeton University





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