¶ … Voter Through Congressional District Research
The bipartisan structure which defines the American system of democratic governance is premised on the notion that informed voters, when provided with an opportunity to select their own leadership, will invariably alternate between candidates with whom they identify closely, and members of the opposing party who offer meaningful reform. This maxim of American politics has resulted in a pattern of Presidential ascendency whereby neither party has captured the White House in three consecutive elections since the four consecutive campaign victories notched by Franklin Delano Roosevelt more than a half-century ago. Nonetheless, there are still pockets of provincial loyalty which still exist throughout the national electorate, with family histories and cultural touchstones serving to elevate one party above its competition in the hearts and minds of voters. In the second congressional district of Tennessee -- an area which spans the metropolitan borders of Knoxville, as well as the surrounding suburbs of Farragut, Maryville and Powell -- this curious phenomenon of local politics has become engrained in the societal structure, forming a continuous chain of leadership from the district's current representative to his Republican predecessors in 1855. With the election of John James "Jimmy" Duncan, Jr. (R-Knoxville) in 1988 -- and his successful reelection every two years afterward to this day -- the second congressional district of Tennessee has maintained a steady state of Republican representation for more than 150 years. However, this unbroken line of succession has not been mirrored in Tennessee's delegation of U.S. Senators throughout the years, as current Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) is just the third GOP member to represent Tennessee in the Senate during the last 100 years. The following analysis of Tennessee's electoral machinations, both on the Congressional and Senatorial level, is intended to examine the array of sociocultural factors which have contributed to the state's decidedly conservative political leaning.
The second congressional district of Tennessee was created on March 4th of 1805, and when the state opted to secede from the Union during the run-up to the Civil War, the seated representative of this district was one of only two in Tennessee to refrain from resigning in allegiance with the Confederacy. After hostilities ceased and the American nation began the arduous efforts of Reconstruction, the largely agrarian, small-scale farming population of the second congressional district aligned itself unequivocally with the Republican Party, an allegiance which has remained unbroken to this day. Voters in the second congressional district of Tennessee pride themselves on consistency, and before Jimmy Duncan, Jr. was elected to represent the state's interests in the House of Representatives, his father John Duncan, Sr. held the seat for more than 23 years (Barone & Cohen, 2005). As the son of one of Tennessee's most respected GOP officials -- in a district which has voted Republican for more than 150 years running -- the younger Duncan was groomed for the political life from a young age, and his conservative roots were deeply planted. As revealed in a comprehensive profile on Duncan's political career published by The American Conservative, the Congressman's son was "a teenaged Goldwater enthusiast, (who) rode a train for 77 hours to the San Francisco convention to serve as an honorary assistant sergeant-at-arms" (Kauffman, 2005) and sent his first paycheck earned working as a grocery store bagboy to support conservative stalwart Barry Goldwater's 1964 presidential bid. Duncan went on to earn a law degree from George Washington University Law School in 1973, and he worked as a practicing attorney until 1981 before becoming a state court judge in Knox County. When the elder Duncan passed away suddenly in 1988, his son took up the mantle and entered a special election to replace his late father in the House, an election which he won handily.
Despite not facing a serious reelection challenge during his time in Congress, Duncan has been extremely active on the House floor upon his arrival in Washington, gaining a certain level of fame (or infamy in the eyes of his more hawkish constituents) after he was one of only six House Republicans to vote against authorizing the 2003 War in Iraq (Kauffman, 2005). Duncan's moral stance on unprompted foreign engagement by the American military has been confirmed numerous times throughout his tenure, as Duncan voted against...
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This leads to a high degree of autonomy for some subcommittees, while other subcommittees have only limited autonomy. Those with a high degree of autonomy will play a more direct role in legislative issues. In addition to the committees, Congress has an entrenched leadership system. The highest rank is the Speaker of the House. Each party also has a Leader and a Whip. The leader runs the party's activities in
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