The extraordinary swings in the scope and content of the policy
agenda during the first Clinton administration revealed a
fundamental partisan divide over the social role of the federal
government. This book argues that the recent conflicts over social
policy represent key elements in strategies that parties designed
in an attempt to consolidate their hold over the federal
government. Long frustrated by divided government, each party
exceeded its electoral mandate in hopes of enacting major policy
reforms aimed to shift politics in their direction for the
foreseeable future.
The book traces the overreaching and limited legislative success
that characterized the first Clinton administration's approach to
three distinctive features of politics and policymaking: the
polarization of political elites; the predominance of advertising
campaigns and intense interest group politics as political parties
have ceased to mobilize ordinary people; and the unprecedented role
that budgetary concerns now play in social policymaking. Although
neither party managed to enact its major transforming agenda,
Congress did pass new policies--most notably welfare reform--that
together with a host of other changes in the states and the private
sector altered the landscape for social policy. The poor have been
the biggest losers as Democrats and Republicans have fought to win
the middle class over to their vision of the future.
The authors first analyze the institutions and tools of
policymaking, including Congress, the political use of public
opinion polling, and the politics of the deficit. They then
consider policies designed to win over the middle class, including
health care policy, employer-provided social benefits, wages and
jobs, and crime policy. Last, they address policies targeted at the
disadvantaged, including welfare, affirmative action, and urban
policy.
In addition to the editor, the contributors include John
Ferejohn, Lawrence R. Jacobs, Robert Y. Shapiro, Paul Pierson, Mark
A. Peterson, Cathie Jo Martin, Ann Lin, R. Kent Weaver, Linda
Williams, and John Mollenkopf.
Copublished with the Russell Sage Foundation
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