The Perfect Tie
The True Story of the 2000 Presidential Election
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- $48.99
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- $48.99
Publisher Description
In The Perfect Tie: The True Story of the 2000 Presidential Election, James W. Ceaser and Andrew E. Busch continue their study of national elections and their broader implications for American politics and society. With groundbreaking research of electoral politics and penetrating discussions of divided government, independent candidates, party platforms, realignment theory, the electoral college, and campaign strategies, Ceaser and Busch attempt to make sense of the 2000 presidential election. By separating myth from fact in presidential contests and by emphasizing the significance of frequently overlooked issues, such as foreign policy, this book is essential reading for courses in American Government, Campaigns and Elections, and Presidential Politics, as well as for any American interested in the real and lasting importance of the 2000 elections.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In their third report on presidential campaigns (they've also covered the 1992 and 1996 elections), political scientists Ceaser (Univ. of Virginia) and Busch (Univ. of Denver) present the story of one of the nation's most unusual and perhaps most bizarre elections. In 2000, for the first time, the electorate was evenly divided between Republicans and Democrats; but a full third of the electorate, the "floating voters," were undecided. The trick for Gore or for Bush would have been to maintain their party bases, which both did, while capturing a good percentage of the floating voters, which both failed to do. Hence, the closeness of the election, the (almost) perfect tie. Given the lack of any grand theme or major crisis to give the election definition, much depended on how well the candidates campaigned, and the authors conclude that here Bush did the better job. Oddly, Bush came off more Clintonesque than Gore, who seemed too ravenous to ascend the throne, too vulnerable to attacks alleging that he would rock the economic boat with overly ambitious government projects. The authors cover the ups and downs and ins and outs of the election, but they deal with much more the politics of pre-campaign fund-raising, the dramatic primary challenges of Bradley and McCain, and of course the postelection legal struggles in and about Florida, in which the Supreme Court ultimately intervened. All of this is told in a compelling narrative and clear, if at times overly detailed (they are, after all, political scientists), analysis.