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This book examines the SuperPAC network structure and their potential for affecting electoral outcomes in the wake of the landmark
Citizens United Supreme Court ruling. This new political environment has important implications for the political system with respect to political competition and electoral accountability. In a timely analysis, this book contributes to our understanding of who runs for political office, the role of SuperPACs, and the applications of social network analysis to determine political influence in the electoral process.
List of contents
Part I: How did we get here? 1. Big Money Finds a Way; 2. Attempts to Control Big Money and Protect the First Amendment; 3. A Theory of Group Electoral Influence and Quality Subsidy Provision; Part
II: Analyzing SuperPACs and the Quality Subsidy 4. Who are the SuperPACs and what did they do in 2012?; 5. Ideologues, Investors and Opportunists: Network Analysis of SuperPACs; 6. Candidate-Making & Spoilers: the Quality Subsidy Argument;
Part III: Future Directions 7. SuperPACs, NonProfits, and Reform; 8. Conclusion - Wither Political Parties?; Appendix: A Brief Introduction to Social Network Analysis
About the author
Suzanne Robbins is Assistant Professor of political science at George Mason University, specializing in American politics. Her research applies theories from political economy to questions relating to how political institutions structure the behavior of political organizations throughout the political process, especially focusing on the behavior of organized interests.
Summary
The relationship between money and politics is a central concern to scholars and casual observers alike, especially when it seems to have such a pronounced impact on the electoral landscape in America. Conventional wisdom suggests that money affects politics: whether via lobbying or through elections, big money exerts too much influence in the political process. But academic research has only found mixed results to support these conclusions. Robbins’s book reexamines this influence in light of the dramatic changes in federal campaign finance rules, which have made it possible for large donors and "SuperPACs" to exert influence on the political system in potentially dramatic ways. Robbins argues that SuperPACs provide a quality subsidy for marginal candidates, giving otherwise uncompetitive or unqualified candidates a better shot at winning office.
This book examines the SuperPAC network structure and their potential for affecting electoral outcomes in the wake of the landmark Citizens United Supreme Court ruling. This new political environment has important implications for the political system with respect to political competition and electoral accountability. In a timely analysis, this book contributes to our understanding of who runs for political office, the role of SuperPACs, and the applications of social network analysis to determine political influence in the electoral process.