eBook

$56.50 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

The 2012 Republican nomination process went on longer than most pundits predicted early on. While Mitt Romney began the season as the prohibitive favorite, he was tested repeatedly by what was seemingly the Republican flavor of the week (including Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich, and Rick Santorum). The sheer number of candidates who were viewed as legitimate contenders demonstrate the fundamental concern facing Republicans moving forward: a fractured party. The pro-business, Tea Party, and evangelical Christian wings disagreed in 2010 on who would provide the best alternative to Democratic President Barack Obama and as a result created a crippling nomination period. By the time Romney was able to claim victory, he was severely wounded after countless attacks from his fellow Republicans. To this internal discontent, we can also add the changing national demographics that could lead to electoral problems for Republicans in their own right. Consider that Mitt Romney did better with older, white male voters than John McCain had. Unfortunately, the share of the national vote for this demographic decreased from 2008 to 2012. As Rand Paul stated recently, the time has come for Republicans to reach out to individuals who do not fit the stereotyped Republican image if they have any hope of being successful. In this volume, we assess how the 2012 GOP nomination cycle is indicative of just how the Republican Party has become, in the words of pundit Cuck Warren, a “Mad Men Party in a Modern Family World.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739175934
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 08/28/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 275
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

William J. Miller is assistant professor of public administration at Flagler College in St. Augustine, Florida. He received his doctorate in 2010 in public administration and urban studies from The University of Akron along with a master’s degree in applied politics (campaign management and polling). He is the editor of Tea Party Effects on 2010 U.S. Senate Elections: Stuck in the Middle to Lose (Lexington 2012) and The Political Battle over Congressional Redistricting (Lexington 2013).

Table of Contents

Chapter One: The 2012 Republican Nomination Season: A Clown Car or Feuding Conservatives?, William J. Miller

Chapter Two: The Impact of Rules Changes on the 2012 Republican Presidential Primary Process, Joshua T. Putnam

Chapter Three: White Knights to the Rescue! The Non-Candidates of 2012, William Cunion

Chapter Four: The Curious Candidacy of Jon Huntsman, David F. Damore andKenneth J. Retzl

Chapter Five: Early to Rise, Early to Fall: The Short Lived Hope of Michele Bachmann, Jason Rich and Brandy A. Kennedy

Chapter Six: The Hermanator: Anti-Elitism and the Rise of Herman Cain, Andrew L. Pieper

Chapter Seven: Rick Perry: The Quickly Fading Star of Texas, Brian Arbour

Chapter Eight: Newt Gingrich: It Takes More than Ideas to Win a Nomination, Joshua P. Stockley

Chapter Nine: Ron Paul: Establishment Outsider or Radical Insider?, Jeremy D. Walling

Chapter Ten: Of Sweater Vests and Broken Dreams: Santorum’s Almost Win, Daniel J. Coffey and Terrence M. O’Sullivan

Chapter Eleven: Mitt Romney—The Republican Choice, Sean D. Foreman

Chapter Twelve: The Victor’s Reward and the Future of the GOP, William J. Miller
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews