Knowledge

Favorite son

Source đź“ť

27: 72:, the technique has fallen out of use, as party rule changes in the early 1970s required candidates to have nominations from more than one state. A politician whose electoral appeal derives from their native state, rather than their political views is called a "favorite son". For example, in the United States, a presidential candidate will 57:
favorite son to keep other candidates' campaigns out of the state, or prevent a rival local politician from becoming a favorite son. The favorite son may explicitly state that the candidacy is not viable, or that the favorite son is not a candidate at all. The favorite son may hope to receive the vice-presidential nomination,
56:
Serious candidates usually, but not always, avoided campaigning in favorite sons' states. If a party's leader in a state, usually the governor, was unsure of whom to support, as the favorite son the state party could avoid disputes. Conversely, a party leader who has chosen a candidate might become a
52:
term. At the quadrennial American national political party conventions, a state delegation sometimes nominates a presidential candidate from the state, or less often from the state's region, who is not a viable candidate in the view of other delegations, and votes for this candidate in the initial
464:
To further understand why modern nominating conventions are so dull, we need to look beyond the candidate-focus of the delegates: namely, to the fact that convention delegates elected to represent "uncommitted" or a favorite-son candidate have all but
129: 73: 96:. Especially in parliamentary systems, a "favorite son" is a party member to whom the party leadership is likely to assign a prominent role, for example, 526: 355: 263: 234: 208: 184: 159: 53:
ballot. The technique allows state leaders to negotiate with leading candidates in exchange for the delegation's support in subsequent ballots.
61:
post or other job, increase support for the favorite son's region or policies, or just the publicity from being nominated at the convention.
383: 329: 81: 316:
Favorite sons were already, almost necessarily, in decline as the nomination moved outside the convention in the prereform years.
426: 117: 64:
The technique was widely used in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Since nationwide campaigns by candidates and binding
493: 472: 405: 507: 482: 440: 415: 339: 309: 531: 20: 58: 536: 541: 432: 297: 105: 499: 459: 301: 360: 164: 134: 8: 69: 452: 454:
Primary Politics: How Presidential Candidates Have Shaped the Modern Nominating System
503: 478: 436: 411: 335: 305: 290: 16:
A term in politics referring to candidates preferred due to geography or familiarity
379: 189: 130:
List of major-party United States presidential candidates who lost their home state
65: 101: 386:
Zarstvo and Communism: Italian Diplomacy in Russia in the Age of Soviet Communism
85: 193:. UPI. September 20, 1971. pp. 5A – via Google News Archive Search. 520: 89: 35: 209:"Favorite Son Idea is Devised to Put State in Strong Position at Convention" 109: 292:
Bifurcated Politics: Evolution and Reform in the National Party Convention
218:. Perry News Services. p. 22 – via Google News Archive Search. 214: 97: 113: 77: 356:"Favorite Son Groups Will be Numerous at 1940 Convention of Democrats" 93: 26: 49: 375: 168:. January 12, 1928 – via Google News Archive Search. 474:
Encyclopedia of American Political Parties and Elections
364:. August 4, 1939 – via Google News Archive Search. 404:
Elliot, Jeffrey M.; Ali, Sheikh R. (1 September 2007).
80:. A particularly notable instance of this occurred in 202: 200: 407:
The Presidential-Congressional Political Dictionary
471:Sabato, Larry J.; Ernst, Howard R. (14 May 2014). 451: 289: 264:"How Term 'Favorite Son' Got Started in Politics" 197: 518: 257: 255: 30:Favorite son banner from 1980 for John Connally, 88:lost 49 of 50 states against popular incumbent 388:. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2019, p. 110 328:Tarr, Dave; Benenson, Bob (22 October 2013). 252: 179: 177: 175: 327: 229: 227: 225: 154: 152: 150: 470: 241:. Associated Press. May 29, 1968. p. 1 527:Political terminology of the United States 235:"Smathers Gets Favorite Son Candidate Nod" 206: 172: 403: 222: 147: 382:was termed "the Party's favourite son": 25: 458:. Brookings Institution Press. p.  449: 277:– via Google News Archive Search. 248:– via Google News Archive Search. 519: 491: 450:Kamarck, Elaine C. (1 December 2009). 424: 287: 261: 492:Safire, William (14 November 2017). 118:Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 160:"How 'Favorite Son' Politics Works" 13: 14: 553: 92:, winning only his home state of 262:Tucker, Ray (January 30, 1960). 207:Meiklejohn, Don (July 3, 1960). 397: 462:– via Internet Archive. 368: 348: 321: 281: 76:win the support of their home 1: 495:Safire's Political Dictionary 140: 21:Favorite Son (disambiguation) 7: 123: 10: 558: 425:Harris, Joseph P. (1961). 33: 18: 512:– via Google Books. 487:– via Google Books. 445:– via Google Books. 433:Stanford University Press 420:– via Google Books. 374:But not only in them: in 344:– via Google Books. 288:Shafer, Byron E. (1988). 298:Harvard University Press 106:Prime Minister of Canada 34:Not to be confused with 500:Oxford University Press 477:. Infobase Publishing. 185:"No Demo Favorite Sons" 410:. Wildside Press LLC. 31: 532:Political terminology 384:Randazzo, Francesco, 29: 361:The Day (New London) 165:The Pittsburgh Press 135:Home state advantage 70:brokered conventions 19:For other uses, see 428:California Politics 268:The Free Lance-Star 537:Political concepts 84:, when challenger 32: 239:Ocala Star-Banner 66:primary elections 46:favorite daughter 549: 542:Political people 513: 488: 467: 457: 446: 431:(3rd ed.). 421: 391: 380:Nikolai Bukharin 372: 366: 365: 352: 346: 345: 331:Elections A to Z 325: 319: 318: 295: 285: 279: 278: 276: 275: 259: 250: 249: 247: 246: 231: 220: 219: 204: 195: 194: 190:The Deseret News 181: 170: 169: 156: 557: 556: 552: 551: 550: 548: 547: 546: 517: 516: 510: 485: 443: 418: 400: 395: 394: 373: 369: 354: 353: 349: 342: 326: 322: 312: 286: 282: 273: 271: 270:. pp. 4, 7 260: 253: 244: 242: 233: 232: 223: 205: 198: 183: 182: 173: 158: 157: 148: 143: 126: 39: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 555: 545: 544: 539: 534: 529: 515: 514: 508: 489: 483: 468: 447: 441: 422: 416: 399: 396: 393: 392: 367: 347: 340: 320: 310: 280: 251: 221: 196: 171: 145: 144: 142: 139: 138: 137: 132: 125: 122: 86:Walter Mondale 68:have replaced 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 554: 543: 540: 538: 535: 533: 530: 528: 525: 524: 522: 511: 509:9780195343342 505: 501: 497: 496: 490: 486: 484:9781438109947 480: 476: 475: 469: 466: 461: 456: 455: 448: 444: 442:9780804709361 438: 434: 430: 429: 423: 419: 417:9781434492340 413: 409: 408: 402: 401: 389: 387: 381: 377: 371: 363: 362: 357: 351: 343: 341:9781506331508 337: 333: 332: 324: 317: 313: 311:9780674072565 307: 303: 299: 294: 293: 284: 269: 265: 258: 256: 240: 236: 230: 228: 226: 217: 216: 210: 203: 201: 192: 191: 186: 180: 178: 176: 167: 166: 161: 155: 153: 151: 146: 136: 133: 131: 128: 127: 121: 119: 115: 111: 107: 103: 102:Jean ChrĂ©tien 99: 95: 91: 90:Ronald Reagan 87: 83: 79: 75: 71: 67: 62: 60: 54: 51: 47: 43: 37: 36:Fortunate Son 28: 22: 494: 473: 465:disappeared. 463: 453: 427: 406: 398:Bibliography 385: 370: 359: 350: 334:. CQ Press. 330: 323: 315: 291: 283: 272:. Retrieved 267: 243:. Retrieved 238: 212: 188: 163: 110:Gordon Brown 63: 55: 45: 42:Favorite son 41: 40: 215:Star-Banner 98:Paul Martin 521:Categories 300:. p.  274:2023-09-28 245:2023-09-28 141:References 114:Tony Blair 378:'s will, 94:Minnesota 50:political 124:See also 116:was the 104:was the 78:state(s) 74:usually 59:Cabinet 48:) is a 506:  481:  439:  414:  338:  308:  213:Ocala 112:while 100:while 376:Lenin 108:, or 504:ISBN 479:ISBN 437:ISBN 412:ISBN 336:ISBN 306:ISBN 82:1984 44:(or 460:153 523:: 502:. 498:. 435:. 358:. 314:. 304:. 302:71 296:. 266:. 254:^ 237:. 224:^ 211:. 199:^ 187:. 174:^ 162:. 149:^ 120:. 390:. 38:. 23:.

Index

Favorite Son (disambiguation)

Fortunate Son
political
Cabinet
primary elections
brokered conventions
usually
state(s)
1984
Walter Mondale
Ronald Reagan
Minnesota
Paul Martin
Jean Chrétien
Prime Minister of Canada
Gordon Brown
Tony Blair
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
List of major-party United States presidential candidates who lost their home state
Home state advantage



"How 'Favorite Son' Politics Works"
The Pittsburgh Press



"No Demo Favorite Sons"

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑