82 research outputs found
Breitbart, Steve Bannon and Donald Trump against the world
As we reach the close of the 2016 presidential campaign, Walter Dean Burnham writes that the unstable dynamics of the election have their roots in a crisis of legitimacy for American politics as a whole. With his calls to return to a more idealized past of American greatness, Donald Trump has set himself up as a âsavior with a time machineâ. Trumpâs appeal to less-educated working class voters has also been further enhanced by the anarchic (or even fascistic) rhetoric of Breitbartâs Steve Bannon
In 2017, Trump and the ultra-right wrecking crew will continue to roll back history
In his final post on the aftermath of the 2016 election, Walter Dean Burnham looks at where the Trump administration and its allies might be leading the US. Looking to history to analyze the present, he writes that the American political universe is based on a liberal individualist tradition, which led to a depoliticization of left-wing voters by the 1960s. This in turn allowed the Republican Party to shift the political spectrum to the right in the 1980s and beyond, a shift which eventually led to the rise of Donald Trump
This yearâs upside-down election is part of a political realignment which encompasses both parties, and is fueled by public rancor.
In his final of three articles commenting on major political realignments, Walter Dean Burnham looks at the 2016 election picture as of early summer 2016. He writes that on the Republican Party side, establishment candidates such as former Florida Governor Jeb Bush have been flatly rejected by the partyâs base, in favor of Donald Trump who is rapidly filling the GOPâs voter vacuum. For the Democrats, while former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has the support of the party establishment, the insurgent candidacy of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders points to the partyâs own ârunaway electorateâ
Welcome to Trumpland
Walter Dean Burnham, of the University of Texas, Austin, warns that with Donald Trumpâs victory amidst the rise of the alt-right, America should prepare itself for a tumultuous roller-coaster of a presidency over the next four years
By co-opting an ultra-right wrecking crew, Donald Trump is sending the US back to the 1920s
Since Donald Trumpâs election, he has been assembling what Walter Dean Burnham has termed his âultra-right wrecking crewâ. And while Trumpâs proposed Cabinet members are the most right-wing group of leaders in 90 years, at least they will require Senate confirmation. Trumpâs appointment of Steve Bannon, on the other hand â who is heavily linked to the alt-right â in a high-profile White House role will require no such approval by elected officials
The 1930s realignment of German politics shows that in times of crisis, political equilibriums can quickly fall out of balance.
In the second of three articles on political realignments, Walter Dean Burnham examines the âperfectâ (and perfectly lethal) critical realignment of German politics and the rise of the Nazis from 1928 to 1933. He writes that the Nazis mostly drew their support from those who had voted for secular-liberal parties in the past and other non-voters. While some supporters of the Catholic Zentrum and the Marxist parties were essentially âimmunizedâ against voting for the Nazis, the crisis of the Great Depression meant that much of the remainder of the electorate were happy to support Adolf Hitlerâs party
Lessons for 2016 from the smashup of the Second Party System and the War of the Whig succession.
The rise of Donald Trump has caused many to predict that the Republican Party as we know it is on the verge of self-destruction. But such party realignments are nothing new. In the first in a series of articles on political realignments, Walter Dean Burnham writes that conflicts between the states over slavery and immigration led to the âWar of the Whig successionâ of the late 1850s and the rise of the Know Nothing Party. What followed was the destabilization of the 2nd Party System, and the creation of the Republican Party
This yearâs election is not likely to mean the end of political gridlock in Washington.
The Democratic and GOP conventions were an illustration of the âTwo Americasâ that John Edwards spoke of in 2004, writes Walter Dean Burnham. While the GOPâs convention had a hateful atmosphere, and displayed a party closing in on itself, the Democrats by contrast, focused on the âPolitics of Joyâ. Even if Hillary Clinton does take the White House, however, he warns that she could still be facing a GOP-held Senate and House next January, which would continue the political gridlock that President Obama has faced for the past two years
A Political Scientist and Voting-Rights Litigation: The Case of the 1966 Texas Registration Statute
It is not the purpose of this Article to deal at length with the evolution of judicial doctrine and legislative action affecting voting rights. Rather, I shall attempt a sketch of two things here: the background and implications of a recently decided case in which a stateâs personal-registration statute was struck down by a federal court, and my own involvement in the case
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