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Power doesn’t disappear in politics; it moves. We dig into how American political parties migrated from tightly controlled organizations to looser coalitions where candidates build their own machines, then fight for the right to wear the party label. With Henry Olsen—senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and a leading analyst of elections and populism—we unpack the long arc from Martin Van Buren’s Albany Regency to today’s primary-driven era, where voters decide nominees and, in practice, rewire party identities.

We start with a clear definition of what a party actually is: a shared brand and a rule-bound way to choose who carries it. From there, we explore how reformers shifted selection power from insiders to primary voters, and why that simple change cascaded through fundraising, messaging, and platform-building. Instead of parties setting agendas, ambitious candidates now read the base, win contests, and make their preferences the party’s default. That’s how Ronald Reagan reshaped Republican priorities—and how Donald Trump mounted a hostile takeover, defeating rivals who still spoke fluent Reaganism.

Henry explains why, despite this hollowing out of traditional machinery, parties remain indispensable. Most people want a trusted shortcut that simplifies complex choices; the party brand provides that. We discuss the benefits and tradeoffs of this new equilibrium: more democratic input and innovation, alongside incentives that can favor intensity over consensus. You’ll come away with a grounded understanding of how primary results translate into platforms, how factions gain dominance, and why no modern democracy functions without parties serving as organizing beacons for voters.

If this conversation gives you a clearer map of how power flows through parties today, tap follow, share the episode with a friend who loves political history, and leave a quick review so others can find the show.

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