Politics in the USA, Sixth Edition

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Politics and elections 77

didates more open and democratic, but the belief in the democratic character
of the convention system proved illusory. Party leaders could manage conven-
tions so that they became a mere facade for oligarchic control by professional
politicians. As part of the revulsion against ‘bossism’ and all that it entailed,
primary elections were introduced in order to break up the oligarchies of city
and county machines. Caucus meetings are still held in a number of states



  • fifteen in 2004 – to select delegates to the national conventions.
    Primary elections give party members a direct voice in the choice of party
    representatives through the medium of a public, state-controlled election,
    in which any member of the party can stand as a candidate and all members
    can vote. Primaries are intended to bring the instruments of mass democ-
    racy, the political parties, under democratic control. The primary elections
    used in the United States are in principle extremely democratic, for the
    definition of ‘party member’ that qualifies the elector to vote in a primary
    is extremely widely drawn. Party membership does not entail fee-paying or
    card-holding membership in an organisation. It usually means nothing more
    than the declaration by the ordinary member of the electorate, when he or
    she registers as a voter, of having voted for a particular party in the past, or
    intending to do so in the future, without of course in any way committing
    him or her to the support of a particular party at the forthcoming election.
    Thus a registered Democrat may vote in the Democratic primary to choose
    the candidates for that party in the general election, but when election day
    comes he or she is quite free to vote for the Republican candidate. In a few
    states democratic principles are taken to the ultimate extreme, for in the
    so-called ‘open primaries’ voters are allowed to vote in whichever primary
    they choose, without being restricted by their party choice at the time of
    registration. Such a system is totally disruptive of party organisation, and for
    a time both parties abandoned the open primary, but a number of states have
    now returned to it.
    In 2004 presidential primaries were held in thirty-five states. In most of
    these elections delegates are chosen for the national conventions, commit-
    ted to the support of particular candidates, at least on the first ballot in the
    convention. In some cases the primary vote merely expresses the preference
    of the voters for a particular prospective nominee for the presidency, without
    binding the delegates, who will nevertheless feel inclined to support the win-
    ner of the primary in their state, particularly if that candidate looks likely to
    win the nomination. The fact that the primary season stretches over months,
    moving from state to state, tends to make the earlier ones more significant,
    because they may start a trend in favour of one of the candidates. This has in
    the past caused a certain amount of manoeuvring by states wishing to have
    an influence in the early stages of the primary battles. In 1988 a number of
    Southern and Western states decided to hold their primaries on the same
    day, and in 1996 seven states held their primaries on ‘Super Tuesday’, 5
    March. The result was to boost the candidacy of Bob Dole in the Republican
    primaries, turning them into a kind of Southern declaration in his favour.

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