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Cooperating Factions
A Network Analysis of Party Divisions in U.S. Presidential Nominations

A network analysis of endorsements in presidential nominations reveals that in both parties, internal factions cooperate often.

Rachel M. Blum (Author), Hans C. Noel (Author)

9781009495608, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 19 December 2024

108 pages
23.5 x 15.9 x 1.2 cm, 0.26 kg

Popular accounts of presidential nomination politics in the United States focus on factions, lanes, or even a civil war within the party. This Element uses data on party leader endorsements in nominations to identify a network of party actors and the apparent long-standing divisions within each party. The authors find that there are divisions, but they do not generally map to the competing camps described by most observers. Instead, they find parties that, while regularly divided, generally tend to have a dominant establishment group, which combines the interests of many factions, even as some factions sometimes challenge that establishment. This pattern fits a conception of factions as focused on reshaping the party, but not necessarily on undermining it.

1. Presidential nominations in intra-party conflict
2. Party factions
3. Endorser networks
4. Establishment and factions in the parties
5. Lanes
6. Legislators
7. Implications
References.

Subject Areas: Constitution: government & the state [JPHC]

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