1. When the fools were right; 2. What we know about identity, ideology, and electability, and what we don't; 3. Interpreting loss; 4. When parties try to fix themselves; 5. The persistence of faction; 6. How narrative changes voters; 7. The invisible primary becomes visible.
Biden's nomination was no fluke: it was a strategic choice by a party that had elevated electability above other concerns.
Seth Masket is Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center on American Politics at the University of Denver. Masket writes regularly for Mischiefs of Faction and FiveThirtyEight. His work has also appeared in Politico, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the Washington Post's Monkey Cage. He is the author of The Inevitable Party: Why Attempts to Kill the Party System Fail and How They Weaken Democracy (2016) and No Middle Ground: How Informal Party Organizations Control Nominations and Polarize Legislatures (2009).
'Read this book for the first truly comprehensive and persuasive
account of why Joe Biden won the 2020 Democratic primary. Masket
also deftly explains how political parties are adapting to the
modern media landscape, and how they can sometimes overreact based
on stylized interpretations of the facts ('narratives') that may
not match the more complicated reality. Masket shows why Biden's
comeback win wasn't nearly as surprising as the conventional wisdom
seemed to hold.' Nate Silver,
editor-in-chief, FiveThirtyEight
'Combining the sophistication of a political scientist with the
readability of a political journalist, Seth Masket sets out to
explore the stories Democrats have told themselves about their
catastrophic loss to Donald Trump. He returns with a vividly
detailed MRI scan of the Democratic mind. The party, he finds, is
vexed less by ideological disagreements than by persistent tensions
over identity politics, class, and race. If you want to understand
what Democrats thought they learned in 2016, and why they bet
everything on an old white guy in 2020, you need to read this
book.' Jonathan Rauch, Brookings Institution
'Seth Masket has written an engaging, illuminating and
thought-provoking book, one that adeptly combines broad theoretical
sweep with fine granular detail. This rigorous and original study
sheds valuable light on timely - and timeless - debates in American
politics.' Molly Ball, TIME national political correspondent and
author of Pelosi
'Seth Masket revisits The Party Decides with a fascinating and
persuasive analysis of the 2016 and 2020 presidential nominations.
This book will quickly become the go-to source for understanding
when and how parties succeed or fail in choosing their presidential
nominees.' Thomas E. Mann, Brookings Institution, co-author of One
Nation After Trump and It's Even Worse Than It Looks
'This book is a must-read for anyone interested in the long-term
impact of the 2016 election on American party politics. Masket
takes us into the heads of state party activists, showing how their
perceptions of the 2016 result shaped nomination politics in 2020.'
Julia R. Azari, Marquette University
'Seth Masket has written a timely and important book on what was
perhaps the most central question of the 2020 Democratic
presidential nomination: Why did 2016 turn out the way that it did?
That question has dominated commentary for four years, but Masket
focuses on it from a particularly important perspective: Why do
Democrats think that Democrats lost a race that they thought they
could win?' Hans Noel, Georgetown University
'There's no better guide to the 2020 Democratic Party nomination
process than Seth Masket. Learning from Loss shows how explanations
for Hillary Clinton's 2016 loss - accurate or not - set the stage
for activists' judgments of the 2020 candidates, paving the way for
Joe Biden's nomination.' Matt Grossmann, Michigan State
University
'Catnip for election watchers and politics junkies, who will want
to reread the book when the dust of 2020 settles.' Kirkus
'Masket … delivers a meticulous and lucidly written analysis of how
Democratic insiders came to believe Joe Biden should be the party's
candidate in the 2020 presidential election.' Publishers Weekly
'Seth Masket's masterful Learning From Loss: The Democrats,
2016–2020 provides a wealth of useful insights for understanding
the Democrats' likely trajectory over the coming years, as well as
the strategic decisions progressives must grapple with as they seek
to expand their influence on Democratic Party politics.' Jared
Abbott, Jacobin
'… Learning from Loss offers a compelling, highly readable account
of recent Democratic Party history … will continue to interest
scholars and students for many years to come.' Frances E. Lee,
American Politics
'Learning from Loss bridges multiple audiences … Packed with pithy
quotations, the book will appeal to general-interest audiences
beyond academia.' Perspectives on Politics
'Learning from Loss makes an important contribution to the study of
nomination politics, expertly weaving together existing research on
parties and campaigns with Masket's own insights.' Daniel J. Lee,
Political Science Quarterly
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