An old pro on political mischief in the United States gives us
an overview of U.S. campaign tactics and ethics from
eighteenth-century pamphleteers to campaign consultants and media
wizards in the 1990s. Bruce Felknor analyzes negative campaigning
today within the context of the evolution of our electoral system.
He offers a candid report on the media's influence on politics and
shows how political reforms from the Progressive Era to Watergate
have often misfired. Students of government and communications,
political consultants and professional politicians, and all readers
who want to vote more intelligently will find this analysis
incisive and the long-forgotten, little-known, and never-told
chapters of political lore written in an engaging fashion.
This in-depth history of political mischief in American
elections is told in three ways. First it examines the surrounding
context of the electoral system and the shifting role of political
parties as campaign consultants and media experts emerged. Next it
examines and analyzes the basic elements of campaign defamation and
deception and the problems of espionage and sabotage. Finally it
considers political reform and concludes with reflections on the
prospects of future reforms.
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