Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byVernon Bennett Modified over 9 years ago
1
Unit III Module 1 Special Interest Groups AP Gov Miller
2
Objectives By the end of this module, SWBAT Identify the different types of and describe the purpose of linkage groups in American politics Describe the political tools that interest groups to affect public policy Describe how interest groups interact with other linkage groups
3
Linked In Americans reach out to institutions of public policy and vice versa via linkage groups Political Parties Special Interest Groups Mass Media These three also regularly interact with each other during campaigns and elections
4
What’s an Interest Group? Madison called them “factions” De Tocqueville called them “voluntary associations” Interest groups exist whenever group of people with a common interest begin to cooperate to push that group’s political agenda
5
Tools of the Trade Interest groups are diverse so they can affect the policy process in many ways Voting blocs – if SIG (special interest group) has many members, its voters can be used as leverage against politicians Campaign finances – if SIG is wealthy, it can leverage these funds as either support for an incumbent (a politician already in office) or fund a new challenger via the actions of the PAC (political action committee)
6
Tools of the Trade More tools Media spotlight – very active SIGs can use a variety of media (TV, radio, Internet, billboards, newsprint, etc.) to either support or attack politicians and/or policies Legal action – SIGs can sue government entities directly or support plaintiffs or defendants in court proceedings with either pro bono attorneys or amicus curiae briefs Lobbying – consultants reach out to elected and appointed officials to try to persuade them to adopt the POV of the interest group
7
Types of SIGs There are four main types of interest groups Corporate Public interest Single interest Government
8
Corporate IGs Most powerful of the four Preferred tools Campaign finances Lobbyists Legal action Includes the following Trade associations (AMA), labor unions (Teamsters), business associations (chambers of commerce)
9
Public Interest IGs Broad objectives of stakeholders, broad policy objectives Preferred tools Voting blocs Media Lobbying Includes the following: AARP, taxpayers groups, NOW, NAACP
10
Single Interest IGs Focused on single policy objective zealous membership Preferred tools Media Legal action Lobbying Includes the following: Greenpeace, NRA, WWF, VFW, church groups
11
Government IGs Local, state government bodies attempting to influence federal government Preferred tools Lobbying Media Voting blocs Includes the following: regional associations, county associations, National Governors Association
12
SIGs and Political Parties “Balloon Model” – political parties conglomeration of different SIGs like a bunch of balloons is simply made of individual balloons Democrat sample “balloons” NOW, NAACP, SEIU, ACLU, Urban League Republican sample “balloons” NRA, NAM, AMA, chambers of commerce, police associations, VFW
13
SIGs and Political Parties SIGs with different aims can sometimes force elements of political parties apart More difficult for politicians to keep coalitions together – coalitions must shift in support of another party or politician essence of Madison’s pluralism If SIGs become too narrow in their agendas, won’t reach out to other SIGs to form coalitions, then gridlock is the result (hyperpluralism)
14
The Future of SIGs In the late 20 th, early 21 st centuries, SIGs have grown more powerful at the expense of political parties Supreme Court has given them more rights to Contribute to political campaigns both directly and indirectly Run issue campaigns in parallel with national, state, local elections As a result they are spreading and growing in influence and financial strength
15
The Future of SIGs Bureaucracy affected as well Insidious sometimes problematic relationship between interest groups, Congress, and bureaucratic agencies called “iron triangles” All these groups have “revolving doors” – individuals rotate jobs working for each of the three sides – develop a unique working relationship that can undermine other greater policy objectives
16
The Future of SIGs Iron Triangle Example Lockheed Aircraft (SIG), Senate Armed Forces Committee (Congress), US Air Force (bureaucracy) Result – F-35 boondoggle (waste of public money) Why it’s bad – Most military experts agree that the F-35 isn’t worth all of the money, not even a good airplane, but Lockheed needs the contract and uses its influence with the Air Force to push the funding through Congress anyway Current damage – over 500 billion dollars
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.