📓 Interest Group Politics in the Northeastern States examines each of the twelve northeastern states in a separate chapter that seeks to convey the flavor and dynamics of politics in that state as a foundation for explaining the lobbying activities found within the state. The interest groups are placed within a historical context and within the current framework of the structure of state government and the party system. Additionally, the lobby registration laws, restrictions on lobbyists, PAC regulations, PAC patterns and political contribution patterns, and relative power of the various interest groups in each state are noted as they have changed over time.
Contents
Ronald J. Hrebenar/The Role of Interest Groups in Northeastern Politics
Sarah McCally Morehouse/Connecticut: Political Parties Court the Interest Groups
Janet B. Johnson and Joseph A. Pika/Delaware: Friends and Neighbors Politics
Douglas I. Hodgkin/Maine: From the Big Three to Diversity
Ronald C. Lippincott and Larry W. Thomas/Maryland:
The Struggle for Power in the Midst of Changes, Complexity, and Institutional Constraints
John C. Berg/Massachusetts: Citizen Power and Corporate Power
Robert Egbert and Michelle Ann Fistek/New Hampshire:
Tradition and the Challenge of Growth
Barbara G. Salmore and Stephen A. Salmore/New Jersey: From Political Hacks to Political Action Committees
David L. Cingranelli/New York: Powerful Groups and Powerful Parties
Patricia McGee Crotty/Pennsylvania: Individualism Writ Large
Mark S. Hyde/Rhode Island: The Politics of Intimacy
Frank Bryan and Ann Hallowell/Vermont: Interest Groups in a Rural Technopolity
James R. Oxendale and Allan S. Hammock/West Virginia: Coal and the New West Virginia Politics
Clive S. Thomas/The Changing Nature of Interest Group
Activity in the Northeast