Presidential Politics
019:171/173/249
Fall 2003
10:30 to 12:20 M/W
4th floor, Seashore Hall

About This Course

"(The Iowa caucus) begins the weeding process and starts, really, that dialogue of the issues that are important. … What people throughout America are thinking about, not necessarily those issues that are being talked about in Washington, not necessarily those issues that are being talked about on the West Coast, but those that are hitting home with American voters."

Susan Ramsey, Greater Des Moines Partnership
"Some cynics believe that politicians always lie. Still, the frequency with which they choose to do so and succeed when they do is in part a function of the vigilance with which reporters discover facts, sort the relevant from the meaningless, and hold those in public life to standards of truthfulness. When reporters carry out those tasks, politicians and those who seek to influence them are deterred from straying from the truth, and informed decision making on the part of the public becomes more likely.”
Kathleen Hall Jamieson and Paul Waldman, The Press Effect


This course is offered by the School of Journalism and Mass Communication
at the University of Iowa

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