All Stories

  1. Introduction
  2. Managing Mixed-Ideological Parties, 1969–1980
  3. Building Permanently Active National Committees, 1912–1932
  4. Conclusion
  5. National Committees and the New Deal, 1933–1952
  6. Power in a Union: How Unexpected Group Partnerships Form
  7. Southern Republicans in Congress during the pre-Reagan era: An exploration
  8. Bootstrap Liberalism: Texas Political Culture in the Age of FDR by Sean P. Cunningham
  9. The Mixed Effects of Candidate Visits on Campaign Donations in the 2020 Presidential Election
  10. Examining Democratic and Republican National Committee Party Branding Activity, 1953–2012
  11. Natural Disasters, ‘Partisan Retrospection,’ and U.S. Presidential Elections
  12. Mobilization and Counter-Mobilization: The Effect of Candidate Visits on Campaign Donations in the 2016 Presidential Election
  13. Whiteness and the Emergence of the Republican Party in the Early Twentieth-Century South
  14. Politicians, Interest Groups, and Next Steps in the Study of American Political Parties as Institutions
  15. Trump and the Party-in-Organization: Presidential Control of National Party Organizations
  16. Party Brands and the Democratic and Republican National Committees, 1952–1976
  17. Party Leaders and Electoral Realignment: Democratic and Republican Southern Strategies, 1948–1968
  18. Truman defeats Dewey: The effect of campaign visits on election outcomes
  19. Disasters and Elections: Estimating the Net Effect of Damage and Relief in Historical Perspective
  20. Queer Clout: Chicago and the Rise of Gay Politics. By Timothy Stewart-Winter. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016.
  21. Measuring the Vice-Presidential Home State Advantage With Synthetic Controls
  22. Southern Delegates and Republican National Convention Politics, 1880–1928
  23. Strategic Choices in Election Campaigns: Measuring the Vice-Presidential Home State Advantage with Synthetic Controls
  24. Gay Marriage and American State Legislatures
  25. National Party Organizations and Party Brands in American Politics