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The Invisible Primary and Its Effects on DemocraticChoice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2009

John Aldrich
Affiliation:
Duke University

Extract

The current method for selecting presidential nominees by the twomajor parties went into place mostly in 1972 and certainly by 1976,after Buckely v. Valeo. It was the naturalculmination of reform efforts over the history of the republic inthat, while prior reforms consistently invoked greater openness anddemocratic governance as rationales for their adoption, this methodactually empowered voters as the central figures in determining whowould be nominated (see Aldrich 1987). This fact became fully evident almost at once.The selection via primaries of senator George McGovern in 1972 andgovernor Jimmy Carter in 1976 as the Democratic presidentialnominees arguably not only would not have happened, they would nothave even come close to winning nomination without successful appealto the voting public.

Type
Symposium
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 2009

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