Making Campaigns Count: Leadership and Coalition-Building in 1980
By (Author) Darrell M. West
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd May 1984
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
324.9730926
Hardback
198
Darrell M. West explores leadership and and coalition-building in the 1980 presidential campaign. Concentrating upon the candidates' own perceptions of the need to build coalitions that will elect them, he raises questions that go to the heart of presidential politics: how have changes in presidential campaigns influenced candidate strategies what coalitions did presidential contenders try to put together how did the candidates use rhetoric, campaign travel, and symbolism in their coalition building what did candidates learn from their audiences in their months and years on the campaign trail what do these lessons imply for political leadership and coalition building To answer these questions, he draws on interviews with ninety advisors to candidates and on data taken from the candidates' travels and speeches, press coverage, and audience reactions. His findings reveal a surprising consistency in the approach to building an electoral majority.
st /f Darrell /i M.