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Electoral Capitalism Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer

Electoral Capitalism By Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer

Electoral Capitalism by Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer


Summary

Electoral Capitalism brings new perspective to the crisis of inequality during the Gilded Age. Examining how party leaders governed by accumulating wealth through the spoils system, Broxmeyer places in historical context debates over capitalism and democracy that continue to resonate today.

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Electoral Capitalism Summary

Electoral Capitalism: The Party System in New York's Gilded Age by Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer

Vast fortunes grew out of the party system during the Gilded Age. In New York, party leaders experimented with novel ways to accumulate capital for political competition and personal business. Partisans established banks. They drove a speculative frenzy in finance, real estate, and railroads. And they built empires that stretched from mining to steamboats, and from liquor distilleries to newspapers. Control over political property-party organizations, public charters, taxpayer subsidies, and political offices-served to form governing coalitions, and to mobilize voting blocs.

In Electoral Capitalism, Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer reappraises the controversy over wealth inequality, and why this period was so combustible. As ranks of the dispossessed swelled, an outpouring of claims transformed the old spoils system into relief for the politically connected poor. A vibrant but scorned culture of petty officeholding thus emerged. By the turn of the century, an upsurge of grassroots protest sought to dislodge political bosses from their apex by severing the link between party and capital.

Examining New York, and its outsized role in national affairs, Broxmeyer demonstrates that electoral capitalism was a category of entrepreneurship in which the capture of public office and the accumulation of wealth were mutually reinforcing. The book uncovers hidden economic ties that wove together presidents, senators, and mayors with business allies, spoilsmen, and voters. Today, great political fortunes have dramatically returned. As current public debates invite parallels with the Gilded Age, Broxmeyer offers historical and theoretical tools to make sense of how politics begets wealth.

Electoral Capitalism Reviews

In this fresh political history of late nineteenth-century New York State, Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer introduces an important new framework for contemplating the Gilded Age nexus of capital, class, ambition, and partisanship . . . Often provocative and consistently compelling, Broxmeyer's highly analytical writing is dense but never abstruse, and balanced with welcome occasions of anecdotal whimsy. His book is an incisive contribution to the study of Gilded Age politics.-The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era


Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer makes a timely and important contribution to our understanding of electoral systems. In his bold and illuminating study, he challenges historical and empirical accounts of the electoral system through a meticulously researched analysis of politics in Gilded Age New York.-Jeffrey Selinger, Bowdoin College

About Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer

Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer teaches political science at the University of Toledo.

Table of Contents

Introduction

The Tammany Bank Run of 1871
Chapter 1. Tammany Hall's Lost Financial Sector

Dawn of the Conkling Machine
Chapter 2. Republican Party Business

Can't You Help Me in Gettin the Vacant Place for Me
Chapter 3. Partisan Poor Relief

The Henry George Boom Fades
Chapter 4. Anti-Monopoly in the Age of Party Consolidation

Conclusion
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments

Additional information

CIN0812252365G
9780812252361
0812252365
Electoral Capitalism: The Party System in New York's Gilded Age by Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer
Used - Good
Hardback
University of Pennsylvania Press
20200814
240
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Electoral Capitalism