"The problem is not Donald Trump. The problem is the Republican Party. It always has been. But how did the Republican Party get so weak that he could take it over? That's not a story that begins in 2016 or 2015. It's a story that begins decades ago. It's a story that the political scientist Daniel Schlozman and Sam Rosenfeld tell in their new book, The Hollow Parties."---Ezra Klein, New York Times
"[An] insightful book. . . . Schlozman and Rosenfeld are unquestionably right that political parties in the United States deserve more thought and more appreciation. Even if solving the problems of today's parties is not straightforward, their book is an important step in making the parties, and maybe our politics, better."---John Sides, Democracy
"[The Hollow Parties] explains the void at the center of the Democratic and Republican Parties."---Ian Ward, Politico
"The book serves as both a history of American political parties and an argument that their deterioration has done untold damage to the U.S., particularly that of the Republican Party. . . . [Schlozman and Rosenfeld] offer an interesting and nuanced perspective on how the GOP has become the party of Donald Trump in recent years."---Ben Jacobs, Washington Examiner
"In this engaging...book, Schlozman and Rosenfeld [take] readers on a journey of party degeneration from Martin Van Buren ("the Little Magician" who built the first American mass political party) to Ray Bliss, the Ohio operative, who rebuilt the Republican Party after Barry Goldwater's landslide loss in 1964, Al From who founded the centrist Democratic Leadership Council in the 1980s, the Tea Party, and Donald Trump"---Kenneth S. Baer, Washington Monthly
"Who loves political parties? Daniel Schlozman and Sam Rosenfeld do. In The Hollow Parties, [they] defend the tradition of official party-building in America, tracing the rise and fall of different factions and crediting partisan organizing with social cohesion."---Dave Weigel, Semafor
"What sets this book apart from others about American political parties is its sense of urgency. [Schlozman and Rosenfeld] offer a historic perspective of the present-day political dysfunction. . . . A work of impressive scholarship."-- "Library Journal"
"[The Hollow Parties] should be widely read and debated. . . . Highly-recommended."-- "Choice"