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INTEREST GROUPS. What Are They? What Interests are represented? How are they organized? Characteristics of Members Strategies: The Quest for Political Power. Interest Groups. Interest: an attitude, value, or preference with some relevance to public policy
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INTEREST GROUPS What Are They? What Interests are represented? How are they organized? Characteristics of Members Strategies: The Quest for Political Power
Interest Groups • Interest: an attitude, value, or preference with some relevance to public policy • Groups of people who share a common concern that further their interests within the framework of government
HOW DO INTEREST GROUPS EXERCISE INFLUENCE? • A. Organization • B. Strategies/Characteristics
Organization(effectiveness = size, intensity, financial resources) • 1. Membership lists • 2. Elected officers • 3. Dues/Treasury • 4. Paid staff
Why don’t some people organize? re: Mancur Olson • a. Shared attitude may not be important. e.g: pro gun control • b. Collective good; e.g., higher prices for all dairy farmers; higher wages for all workers of employer • c. Free ridership...don't pay dues, write congress, etc…still get benefit
Organizations’ Response to problems • compel membership • exaggerate threat • take credit for successes • secondary benefits
Strategies: Quest for Political Power • A. Lobbying v. Gaining Access • B. Litigation • C. Going Public/Public Relations/Protest • D. Electoral Politics • Bribery?
Lobbying Strategy • 1. Defined --making your views known to government • 2. Who is lobbied? • a. Legislative executive and judicial • b. Where are decisions made? • c. where can you be effective? • d. Where will your members notice?
Who are the lobbyists? • b. Law firms (respectability) • c. Public relations firms (versatility) • d. Political consultants • e. Ex-Decision makers: congress, executive branch • know how system works, friends on inside
Restrictions on lobbying • a. Lobbying viewed suspiciously • b. But, 1st freedoms…speech, petition • c. Cannot, should not outlaw lobbying • d. Public exposure: Register and report expenditures ..FEC
Gaining Access Strategy • Iron Triangles/subgovernments – (re: hyperpluralism) • Issue Networks • PACs
Litigation strategy • Direct action • Help Finance • Filing amicus curiae briefs
Public Relations Strategy (Going Public?)- Goals: • a. Create a favorable climate of opinion • b. Mobilize people to contact Congress on specific legislation
2. Going Public - Effectiveness depends on: • a. How much they spend? • b. How long they spend? • c. Whether we have an alternative source of information
Protest Strategy (Going Public?) • 1. Typically used by lower income groups and outgroups • a. Doctors rarely b. CEO never • 2. How effective is protest? • 3. Illegal forms
Protest Strategy -Illegal forms • a. Blocking traffic b. Trespassing • c. Disrupting government functions • Illegal protest has a long tradition in US, but you have to be willing to pay the price
Electoral Politics Strategy (Electioneering) & PACs • 1. Used to be Labor PAC--Congress of Political Equality (COPE) was dominant PAC • b. Money & volunteer workers & campaign managers • c. In some areas it was the Democratic Party
Electoral Politics Strategy • 2. Federal law • a. Can't spend corporate or union treasury to help • b. Can't force employees or union members to contribute money or time
Legal Changes - Buckley v. Valeo (1976) • Running for Senate (NY) Buckley attacks dollar limits on Freedom of Speech • b. Supreme Court • 1. limit contributions -- OK • 2. limit expenditures -- NO
PROBLEMS • A. Negative Campaign • 1980 PACs uncoordinated • Since then candidates pick up • People say they don't believe in negative campaigns – (T/F?)… may affect turnout
Problems/Dilemma • B. Most money goes to incumbents • 1. Influential incumbents • 2. When Democrats were the majority -- most went to them; and vice versa • 3. Is this selling votes?
Tendencies in system • Democrats/Republicans as Minority/Majority in Congress • Campaign Financing Reforms