1 / 15

INTEREST GROUPS

INTEREST GROUPS. Chapter 16 O’Connor and Sabato American Government: Continuity and Change. INTEREST GROUPS. In this chapter we will cover … What Are Interest Groups? The Roots and Development of American Interest Groups What Do Interest Groups Do?

upton-wong
Download Presentation

INTEREST GROUPS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INTEREST GROUPS Chapter 16 O’Connor and Sabato American Government: Continuity and Change

  2. INTEREST GROUPS In this chapter we will cover… • What Are Interest Groups? • The Roots and Development of American Interest Groups • What Do Interest Groups Do? • What Makes an Interest Group Successful?

  3. What Are Interest Groups? • An Interest Group (special interests) is an organization of people with similar policy goals that tries to influence the political process to try to achieve those goals. • Interest groups try to influence every branch and every level of government.

  4. The Roots and Development of American Interest Groups • Interest groups have been part of the American political landscape since the country’s founding. • James Madison in Federalist #10 argued for a proliferation of groups so that no one group could get hegemony over the other groups. • The open nature of the American government invites organized political participation.

  5. The Roots and Development of American Interest Groups • National Groups Emerge (1830-80) • Progressive Era (1890-1920) • Organized Labor – the American Federation of Labor (AFL) (1886) • Business and Trade Associations – The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) (1895) • The Rise of the Interest Group State (1960s and 1970s) • Religious and Ideological Groups • Business Groups, Trade, and Professional Associations • Organized Labor

  6. What Do Interest Groups Do? • The most common and effective interest group technique is lobbying or seeking to influence and persuade others to support your group's position. • Lobbyists are hired by your college or university, businesses, foreign countries, trade associations, and anyone else wanting their voice heard on policy matters. • A lobbyist is someone whose task it is to influence legislation or policymaking.

  7. Direct Techniques: Lobbying private meetings testifying drafting legislation social occasions providing political information supplying nomination suggestions Indirect Techniques: Generating Public Pressure groundswell of public pressure using constituents as Lobbyists building alliances with other groups Interest Groups Techniques

  8. Honest Lobbyists • A lobbyist must be honest and truthful if he or she wants to remain effective. • Access to lawmakers is critical and if a lobbyist gains a reputation for being untruthful or disingenuous legislators’ doors will close. • Of course lobbyists put their group’s position in a favorable light, but good lobbyists will also make lawmakers aware of the downsides of a bill and the arguments on the other side as well.

  9. Top Lobbying Expenditures

  10. What Makes an Interest Group Successful? In general three factors tend to lead to interest group success: • Leaders – Having a prominent leader aids in the reputation of the group and enhances a group’s ability to attain its goals. • Patrons and Funding – Funding is critical. Without money, it is difficult to get your message out. • Members – A group must have members to be successful. Organizing members allows for strength in numbers and pooling of financial support.

  11. Interest Group Ratings of Selected Member of Congress

  12. Pluralism and its Critics • Three criticism of pluralism are • It gives short shrift to those who are not organized. • It fails to deal with the fact that some interests have more power than others. • It seems to leave no room for consideration of transcendent national interests. • Pluralist theory argues that interest group activity brings representation to all. • Interest groups compete and counterbalance one another.

  13. Hyperpluralist Theory Hyperpluralists argue that when interest groups become so powerful that they dominate the political decision-making structures they render any consideration of the greater public interest impossible.

  14. Criticism of Interest Groups Interest Groups have been criticized for • ignoring the wider interest of society • producing confusion and deadlock in Congress • generating so much emotion that they make reasoned discussion difficult • having too much influence

  15. Important Points to Think About • Interest Groups • promote interest in public affairs • provide useful information • serve as watchdogs • represent the interest of citizens

More Related