Cover image for The Populist Paradox : Interest Group Influence and the Promise of Direct Legislation.
The Populist Paradox : Interest Group Influence and the Promise of Direct Legislation.
Title:
The Populist Paradox : Interest Group Influence and the Promise of Direct Legislation.
Author:
Gerber, Elisabeth R.
ISBN:
9781400823307
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (186 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- THE POPULIST PARADOX -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Acknowledgments -- 1. What Is the Populist Paradox? -- A Theory of Interest Group Influence -- Motivation: The Study of Interest Group Influence -- Justification: Why Study Direct Legislation? -- Plan of the Book -- 2. Interest Group Choice -- Forms of Influence -- Interest Group Choice -- Achieving Influence -- Summary and Conclusions -- 3. Direct Legislation Hurdles -- Achieving Direct Modifying Influence -- Achieving Direct Preserving Influence -- Achieving Indirect Modifying Influence -- Achieving Indirect Preserving Influence: Opposing an Initiative to Signal the Legislature -- Behavioral Hurdles -- Summary and Conclusions -- 4. Group Characteristics and Resources -- Monetary and Personnel Resources -- Using Resources to Overcome Hurdles -- Membership Characteristics -- Classifying Groups and Their Resources -- Hypotheses about Motivations and Forms of Influence -- Summary -- 5. Motivations and Strategies -- Methodology -- What Do Groups Say They Do? -- What Do Groups Actually Do? -- Summary and Conclusions -- 6. Direct Policy Consequences -- Direct Policy Consequences -- Summary and Conclusions -- 7. Indirect Policy Consequences -- State Policy Differences -- Summary and Conclusions -- 8. The Populist Paradox: Reality or Illusion? -- Economic Group Limitations -- Citizen Group Dominance -- Implications for the Study of Direct Legislation -- Implications for the Study of Interest Group Influence -- Positive versus Normative Implications -- A Final Assessment -- Appendixes -- A. Direct Legislation Institutions -- B. Survey of Organizations -- References -- Index.
Abstract:
Do small but wealthy interest groups influence referendums, ballot initiatives, and other forms of direct legislation at the expense of the broader public interest? Many observers argue that they do, often lamenting that direct legislation has, paradoxically, been captured by the very same wealthy interests whose power it was designed to curb. Elisabeth Gerber, however, challenges that argument. In this first systematic study of how money and interest group power actually affect direct legislation, she reveals that big spending does not necessarily mean big influence. Gerber bases her findings on extensive surveys of the activities and motivations of interest groups and on close examination of campaign finance records from 168 direct legislation campaigns in eight states. Her research confirms what such wealthy interests as the insurance industry, trial lawyer associations, and tobacco companies have learned by defeats at the ballot box: if citizens do not like a proposed new law, even an expensive, high-profile campaign will not make them change their mind. She demonstrates, however, that these economic interest groups have considerable success in using direct legislation to block initiatives that others are proposing and to exert pressure on politicians. By contrast, citizen interest groups with broad-based support and significant organizational resources have proven to be extremely effective in using direct legislation to pass new laws. Clearly written and argued, this is a major theoretical and empirical contribution to our understanding of the role of citizens and organized interests in the American legislative process.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: