If as Ware claims, there has been more
continuity than discontinuity in the parties since 1820, then perhaps parties
should be seen as more of an expression of the basic weakness of our government
than as a cause of it. The supposed strength of the parties from about 1820 to
about 1900 could be seen as more of an aberration resulting from the use of
patronage than as a genuine strength of the parties themselves. If we define
parties as institutions that aggregate and rationalize the interests and values
of their members and adherents, that provide ideologies by which their members
can promote programs and policies, then patronage has to be seen a means to the
end of developing and promoting this ideology. On the other hand, if patronage
is able to overpower the ideology, as I believe it did with the Jacksonian
spoils system, then the function of parties in the operation of government is
irretrievably distorted.
Granted that technology has added another
dimension to the current dysfunctions, but the basic weakness of parties and of
government is not something new. It only strengthens my contention that
stronger parties would produce a stronger and more effective and efficient
government. Perhaps this is just wishful thinking, but many of the recent
changes in the parties can be seen as tentative movements toward becoming
stronger, and in this sense are positive. The transition from what we have had
for the last two hundred years, and a genuinely national, ideological,
programmatic party will be difficult and wrenching, but the result will be a
more efficient government.