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Interest Group are:  Organizations composed of individuals who share one or more interests in common and who have formed an association for their purpose.

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Presentation on theme: "Interest Group are:  Organizations composed of individuals who share one or more interests in common and who have formed an association for their purpose."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Interest Group are:  Organizations composed of individuals who share one or more interests in common and who have formed an association for their purpose of advancing or protecting their interests

3 Interest groups are similar to political parties  Provide method of participation for people  Act as linkage institution  Provide representation for members  Educate people and leaders about issues  Agenda building-pushing their issues to front of political consciousness  Program monitoring-making sure policies are carried out according to their wishes

4 Similarities continued …  Provide campaign contributions for elections  Goal of influencing policy  Provide factions for electoral competition

5 Differences between political parties and interest groups Parties  Similar views on most issues  Broad coalition of members  Affect policy by getting people elected to office Interest Groups  Similar views on one or a handful of issues  Narrow focus  Affect policy through access and lobbying

6 Types of Interest Groups Private Interest groups: pursue chiefly economic interests that benefit their members  Business groups- largest and most powerful of interest groups that represent large business corporations, chambers of commerce, small business  National Association of Manufacturers  American Petroleum Institute-represents 400 oil and gas corp.  US Chamber of Commerce: 3 million businesses, 2,800 state chambers,

7 Labor Groups  Campaign for workers’ issues like minimum wage, workplace safety, industry protection from overseas competition  AFL-CIO-88 unions and trade groups  United Auto Workers Union  National Education Association  Teamsters Union

8 Agriculture Groups  Farm groups that lobby for farm subsidies, environmental issues, genetic engineering  American Farm Bureau Association  In 2005, over $25 billion paid out

9 Professional Groups  Groups that represent occupations that require some special training (question: what do they lobby for?)  AMA-American Medical Association  ABA-large and well- funded group representing lawyers

10 Other Private Interest Groups  Elderly  Foreign governments  AARP-powerful lobby for people over 55 with a lot of clout on issues like Social Security and prescription drugs. Seniors vote in large numbers

11 Public interest groups: groups that lobby for benefits and interests that are not limited to its members  Consumer Groups: Nader’s Raiders  Women’s Groups: NOW  Religious Groups  Environmental Groups: Audubon Society, Sierra Club

12 Single Issue Groups: groups that look at a single issue they want to change  National Rifle Association: very rich and powerful  Abortion: Operation Rescue, Planned Parenthood  Civil Rights: NAACP, LULAC (a group rising in importance as the Hispanic population grows)  PETA

13 Methods  Interest groups try to influence the making of public policy by using tactics that are effective for them such as donating campaign funds, filing lawsuits, electioneering.  Lobbying provides access for interest groups and forces Congress to take action on their issue. Sometimes no action is a successful strategy because nothing changes, for the interest group.

14 Direct lobbying  Personal Contact: meeting with policymakers and doing what they can to persuade them to support their cause  Providing Expertise: using their specialized body of knowledge about a certain topic to aid in writing legislation  Testifying at hearings: provide information for Congressional hearings to get their message out and get free publicity (see iron triangle)

15 Final direct method  Giving money: Interest groups endorse candidates who support their interest and then help finance that candidate’s campaign by using PACs.  PACs give billions of dollars primarily to congressional campaigns and to incumbents.  PACs are limited by law to give $5,000 for each campaign (hard money), but there are no limits on donations to parties (soft money).  PACs can also create issue ads without specifically endorsing a particular candidate.

16 Indirect Methods  Mobilizing grassroots: Letter campaigns, phone campaigns-getting members to act on their own  Molding public opinion: ads, rallies, rating political leaders; cultivating a positive image of their group in the eyes of the public  Coalition building: ex. Daylight Savings Time Coalition was made up of lobbyists representing 7/11, Kingsford charcoal, amusement parks, lawn and garden centers, meat producers, and travel companies


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