Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Brookings Institution Press
Pages: 276
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-8157-4049-0 • Hardback • July 2023 • $85.00 • (£65.00)
978-0-8157-4050-6 • Paperback • July 2023 • $26.00 • (£19.99)
978-0-8157-4051-3 • eBook • July 2023 • $25.00 • (£18.99)
Elaine C . Kamarck is a senior fellow in Governance Studies and director of the Center for Effective Public Management at the Brookings Institution. She is also a lecturer in public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Kamarck is an expert on American electoral politics, government innovation, and government reform in the United States and developing countries. Her previous books include Why Presidents Fail and How They Can Succeed Again and How Change Happens—or Doesn’t: The Politics of U.S. Public Policy. She served in the Clinton-Gore White House from 1993 to 1997.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Good Old Days?: When Parties Controlled Nominations and Primaries Were to Be Avoided at All Costs
Chapter 2: Sequence as Strategy: How Jimmy Carter “Got It” and Taught Subsequent Presidential Candidates the New Rules of the Road
Chapter 3: The Fight to the First: Iowa, New Hampshire and more
Chapter 4: Proportional Representation: Why Democrats Use It and Republicans Don’t
Chapter 5: Devil in the Details: How the Delegate Count Shapes Modern Nominating Campaigns
Chapter 6: Do Conventions Matter Anymore?: Why No One Could Stop Trump
Chapter 7: The Loss of Peer Review and what it means for democracy
Notes
Index
With her updated title Primary Politics, Elaine Kamarck has provided an indispensable guide to the U.S. system of selecting our presidential candidates. This book explains the evolution of our primary system, the effect it has on presidential candidates, and vice versa. Primary Politics is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand how our presidential candidates reach the general election.
(Previous Edition Praise)— Al Gore, 45th Vice President of the United States (1993-2001)
The strength of Kamarck’s book is the detailed information on candidates’ strategies and their attempts to alter the rules of the game. These are the types of stories that undergraduates find fascinating and the ones that should more often be the background for quantitative approaches to the topics of candidate strategies and nomination rules. For younger scholars, the book serves as a good primer on the modern history of presidential nominations.
(Previous Edition Praise)— Barbara Norrander, Congress & the Presidency
Nobody knows more about the ins and outs of the primary nominating system than Elaine Kamarck. This in-depth update is essential reading because our primary nominating system changes with every presidential election season. In very readable prose, Kamarck shows us how the nominating process has evolved from the party’s control to candidates’ machinations. If you want to be ahead of the curve about the 2020 nominating system, this book is a guide to another electrifying primary season.
(Previous Edition Praise)— Donna Brazile, former interim chairwoman, Democratic National Committee