ABSTRACT

The presidential election of 2008 is unique in a history of memorable campaigns for the highest office in the U.S. Never before has an African American captured the nomination of a major political party. Never before have the Republicans nominated a woman for vice president. Never before has a woman come so close to capturing the nomination of a major party. And with at once one of the oldest and youngest candidates contending for the office, never before has the campaign been stretched over such a range of voters and issues. Add to that the multiple threats to the U.S. economy and the longest war the country has ever waged and the electoral context is set. This book is the first to describe and assess these monumental developments with original analysis by an all-star cast of contributors. No other book captures both the range and depth of this one in its early look at the meaning of the most significant election in years-one with unprecedented institutional, constitutional, and policy consequences for all of us.

chapter 1|19 pages

The Bush Presidency and the 2008 Presidential Election

Context and Imprint

chapter 2|28 pages

Electing Obama

The 2008 Presidential Campaign

chapter 3|22 pages

When Democracy Works

The 2008 Presidential Nominations

chapter 4|17 pages

The Nominating Process

Change, More Change, and Continuity

chapter 5|23 pages

The “Invisible Primary” Becomes Visible

The Importance of the 2008 Presidential Nominations, Start to the Finish

chapter 6|13 pages

The Scope of Participation in the 2008 Presidential Race

Voter Mobilization and Electoral Success

chapter 7|12 pages

Clinton and Obama

The Impact of Race and Sex on the 2008 Democratic Presidential Primaries

chapter 8|17 pages

E-Politics and the 2008 Presidential Campaign

Has the Internet “Arrived”?

chapter 9|17 pages

“Hot” and “Not-So-Hot” Buttons in the 2008 Presidential Election

Surprises from Wasilla to Wall Street

chapter 10|16 pages

A Mandate for Change?

Decisive Victory in a Time of Crisis

chapter 11|24 pages

A Transforming Election

How Barack Obama Changed American Politics