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Chapter 7 Interest Groups
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Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Chapter 7 Interest Groups

Page 2: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

SIGs and Democracy

• Line of communication

• Increases public awareness and action

• Great source of research and information

• Public watch dog

• Access to government officials

• Reinforces pluralistic aspect of democracy.

• “Melting pot” contribution– Heterogeneity of political culture

Page 3: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

7-1Percentage of Americans Belonging to Various Groups

Page 4: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.
Page 5: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

SIGs and Parties

• SIGs– Influence– Specialists– Centralized– Tightly Organized

• Political Parties– Populate government

– Control policy– Generalists– Decentralized

Organized membership and pursuit of policy goals because of shared interests.

Page 6: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Why Organize?

• Increase the chance that their views will be heard and they will be able to influence who is in office and policy decisions.

• Interest groups enhance political participation.

• Policy versus personnel influence.

• Primary tactics: education, mobilization, lobbying, and monitoring government actions.

Page 7: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Organizational Components

• Leadership— Most groups are dominated by a strong

leadership.

• Money

• Agency staff to carry out tasks

• Passive members

• Accordingly, groups are considered oligarchic rather than democratic.

Page 8: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Why Join?• Informational benefits - data sharing and

training

• Material benefits - monetary (pay and perks)

• Solidary benefits - social, network connections

• Purposive benefits - non materialistic but issue specific

• Ideological - supporting liberal or conservative agendas

Page 9: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

The Free Rider

• Group benefits may be available to the public (a collective benefit).

• No reason to join the group if you are already receiving benefits

• Creates a “free rider” problem

Page 10: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

The Characteristics of Members

• Higher incomes

• Higher levels of education

• Work in management or professional positions.

• Group membership has a very pronounced upper-class bias.

Page 11: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

7-4Decline in Union Membership, 1948 to Present

Page 12: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Strategies: How to Shape Policy

• Lobbying

• Electoral Politics

• Going Public

• Grassroots Mobilization

• Litigation

Page 13: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Lobbying• Lobbying is a strategy by which organized

interest groups seek to influence the passage of legislation by exerting pressure on members of the legislature.

• Full time career

• Washington, D.C. - epicenter

• Revolving door between lobbyists and government

• Money and bad press for “gifts”

Page 14: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Lobbying

• Personal contacts

• Research and specialized information

• Congressional testimony

• Legal assistance - write legislative proposals

• Follow up on execution

Page 15: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Using Electoral Politics versus Direct Lobbying

• Many groups engage in electoral politics to ensure the election of politicians sympathetic to the groups interests.— Campaign contributions through political

action committees

— Campaign activism

• “Issue advocacy” media uses to change public opinion and influence elections.

Page 16: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Political Action Committees PACs

• PACs - interest groups work in the electoral arena.

• Watergate Scandal 1972• PACs regulated by the Federal Election

Commission.• Contributions are limited to $5,000 per

election.• Attempts to reform have failed

– Opposed by business and labor– Importance of soft money.

• DNC and foreign contributions for influence.

Page 17: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.
Page 18: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

PAC Campaign Activism• Other than fund raising.• Can be temporary.• Republican efforts to increase voter turnout

very successful in 1994.– NRA– Christian coalition

• Not much support continued into 1996 for Bob Dole.

• Labor groups increasing efforts in support of Democrats.

Page 19: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Gaining Access• Groups must maintain access to the decision making

process through relationships with Congress and agencies.

— Iron triangle (Interest groups, legislature, executive agencies) fairly permanent

— Issue network (Add consultants, officials, activists, academics) usually temporary

— Corridoring (Gaining influence within an executive agency)

— Capture (Control of an agency)

Page 20: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Defense Oriented Iron Triangle

Page 21: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Going Public – Indirect Lobbying• Going public is a strategy that attempts to

mobilize the public to support the groups objective.

— Institutional advertising ( Creating a positive group image)

— Social movements (Boycotts, demonstrations, marches)

— Grassroots mobilization (Encouraging members to contact legislators)

Page 22: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Using the Courts

• Groups sometimes turn to litigation when they lack access or when they are dissatisfied with governmental decisions.

• They finance individual litigation, provide attorneys, or file amicus curiae briefs in support of a particular position.

• Most expensive tactic.

• Used as a last resort at times to slow down policy process.

Page 23: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.
Page 24: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Types of SIGs• Economic

– Business (IBM, Farm Bureau Federation)– Labor (AFL-CIO, Teamsters)– Professional (ABA, AMA)– Trade (Industry specific - oil, telecomm, railroads)

• Social (NOW, NAACP, AIM, MALDEF)• Religious (Christian Coalition, Catholic

Conference, Jewish Defense League)• Ideological (People for the American Way,

Heritage Foundation)• Public Interest (ACLU, Sierra Club, Common

Cause)• Single Issue (National Abortion Rights

Campaign)• Seniors (Gray Panthers, AARP)

Page 25: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

AARP

• Originally single issue group with selective benefits

• 33 million members

• $500 million income each year

• More circulation of magazine than Time, Newsweek, and US News & World Report combined

• Extremely powerful grassroots capabilities

Page 26: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Regulatory Efforts

• Federal Lobbying Act of 1946– Only applies to Congress– Registration and employer identification– Only applies to those declaring their principal

purpose is to try to directly influence legislation– No agency to oversee

• Federal Election Campaign Act of 1974– Watergate scandal– limited campaign contributions– dramatic increase in PACs (100 - 4500)

Page 27: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Putting it in Perspective

• Positives– Fits nicely into pluralistic model

– Overlapping concerns results in cross-cutting cleavage – not creating major polarization

• Negatives– Not all represented

– Unequal influences

– Interest Group Elitism

– Government gridlock

Page 28: Chapter 7 Interest Groups SIGs and Democracy Line of communication Increases public awareness and action Great source of research and information Public.

Groups and Interests: The Dilemma

• Attempts to limit - First Amendment freedom of speech and right to petition the government.

• Groups provide access to public officials.• Business groups are most powerful• Balance is inconsistent with democratic ideals.• Groups have more impact than voters.• Regulating groups limits freedom.• Not really regulating groups limits equality.