1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2012
Summary
Modern democracy is unthinkable save in terms of the parties.
– Schattschneider 1942The party system that is needed must be democratic, responsible and effective – a system that is accountable to the public, respects and expresses differences of opinion, and is able to cope with the great problems of modern government.
– American Political Science Association 1950Thus, if the parties were in trouble, so too was democracy.
– White 1992INTRODUCTION
For democracy in a large republic to succeed, many believe that responsible party government is needed, with each party offering voters a clear alternative vision regarding how the polity should be governed and then, if it wins the election, exerting sufficient discipline over its elected members to implement its vision (cf. Ranney 1951; American Political Science Association 1950). America was once thought to have disciplined and responsible parties. Indeed, students of nineteenth-century American politics saw parties as the principal means by which a continental nation had been brought together: “There is a sense in which our parties may be said to have been our real body politic. Not the authority of Congress, not the leadership of the President, but the discipline and zest of parties has held us together, has made it possible for us to form and to carry out national programs” (Wilson 1908: 218, 221; cf. Bryce 1921: 119).
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- Information
- Setting the AgendaResponsible Party Government in the U.S. House of Representatives, pp. 1 - 14Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005