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Electoral Capitalism

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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. Part...
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  • 14 August 2020
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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.

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Price: $55.00
Pages: 240
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: American Governance: Politics, Policy, and Public Law
Publication Date: 14 August 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812252361
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / American Government / Local, Political economy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Economic Policy

"Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer has made an important original contribution to our understanding of Gilded Age America… [Electoral Capitalism’s] originality and forceful larger argument—that the history of democracy in America and the history of American capitalism cannot be fully understood without grasping the fusion of both within electoral politics—make it required reading for historians of politics. The Gilded Age will never look quite the same."
Jeffrey D. Broxmeyer teaches political science at the University of Toledo.

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