Dictionary Definition
caucus n : a closed political meeting v : meet to
select a candidate or promote a policy
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From the Algonquian Indian meaning meeting of tribal leaders.Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ɔːkəs
Noun
caucus (plural caucuses)- Appointment of or allocation of votes for presidential candidates within a party (United States).
- An area in the Eastern European Republic of Armenia.
Verb
- To meet in caucus.
- November 13, 2006, Associated Press, (reprinted in the Boston
Globe)
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/11/13/lieberman_wont_rule_out_gop_caucusing/
- "Senator Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut said yesterday that he will caucus with Senate Democrats in the new Congress, but he would not rule out switching to the Republican caucus if he starts to feel uncomfortable among Democrats."
- November 13, 2006, Associated Press, (reprinted in the Boston
Globe)
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/11/13/lieberman_wont_rule_out_gop_caucusing/
Extensive Definition
A caucus is a meeting of supporters or members of
a political
party or movement. The exact definition varies among political
cultures.
In the United States
In United
States politics and government, caucus has several distinct but
related meanings. One meaning is a meeting of members of a political
party or subgroup to coordinate members' actions, choose group
policy, or nominate candidates for various offices. The term is
frequently used to discuss the procedures used by some states to
select presidential
nominees, such as the Iowa
caucuses, the first and largest in the modern
presidential election cycle, and the only occasionally relevant
Texas
caucuses.
Since 1980 such caucuses have become, in the
aggregate, an important component of the nomination process.
Because such caucuses are infrequent and complex to organize, there
is a practice version called a maucus, a portmanteau of mock
caucus.
In early American history, the
Congressional nominating caucus and legislative caucus were
influential meetings of congressmen to decide the party's nominee
for President and party platforms. Similar caucuses were held by
the parties at state level.
Another meaning is a subgrouping of officials
with shared affinities or ethnicities who convene, often but not
always to advocate, agitate, lobby or to vote collectively, on
policy. At the highest level, in Congress
and many state legislatures,
Democratic and
Republican members organize themselves into a caucus
(occasionally called a "conference"). There can be smaller caucuses
in a legislative body, including those which are multi-partisan or even bicameral. Of
the many Congressional
caucuses, one of the best-known is the Congressional
Black Caucus, a group of African-American
members of Congress. Another prominent example is the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus, whose members voice and advance
issues affecting Hispanics in the
United States, including Puerto Rico.
In a different vein, the Congressional Internet Caucus is a
bipartisan group of Members who wish to promote the growth and
advancement of the Internet. Other congressional caucuses such as
the Out of
Iraq Caucus, are openly organized tendencies or political
factions (within the House
Democratic Caucus, in this case), and strive to achieve
political goals, similar to a European "platform,"
but generally organized around a single issue.
Among American left-wing groups,
a caucus may be an openly organized tendency or political
faction within the group, equivalent to a European "platform".
Examples would include the "Debs," "Coalition" and "Unity" Caucuses
of the
Socialist Party of America in its last years.
In Washington
State, the caucus has become controversial. According to the
Web
site for Washington Democrats, even though the Washington State
Legislature decided the state would hold a primary, the Washington
State Democratic Party decided to continue choosing its delegates
through the traditional caucuses. As a result, votes for a
Democratic candidate in the State Primary do not count toward
delegate selection, although the state will spend $9 to $10 million
on it.
Despite a rule in the Democratic Party that
delegates are to be allocated proportionally rather than winner
take all, some individual caucus groups decide for themselves how
to allocate their group's delegates — for instance, by using a
majority vote to determine which of the two methods to select.
Discussion of party rules is not necessarily part of the caucus
experience, and few rules govern the actual process. And, in the
winner-take-all scenario, a group's delegate allocation may be
reported as unanimous, with the minority votes ignored. Depending
on how the caucus. is organized, the caucus system may require
public announcement of which candidate a voter supports. Voters
have the option to draft resolutions, and those are introduced by
delegates at later divisional caucuses or conventions.
In Commonwealth nations
In some Commonwealth
nations, a caucus is a regular meeting of all Members
of Parliament who belong to a political party. In a Westminster
System, a party caucus can be quite powerful, as it can elect
or dismiss the party's parliamentary leader. The caucus also
determines some matters of policy, parliamentary tactics, and
disciplinary measures against disobedient MPs. In some parties, the
caucus also has the power to elect MPs to Cabinet when the party is
in government. For example this is traditionally so in the Australian
Labor Party (ALP) and the New
Zealand Labour Party. The term is rarely used in the United
Kingdom.
Since Kevin Rudd was
elected Prime Minister of Australia on
November
24 2007,
he instead of the ALP caucus will choose the cabinet.
In New Zealand
and in ALP, caucus can refer to the group of the MPs themselves,
rather than their meeting. Thus, the Australian Federal
Parliamentary Labor Party is commonly called "the Labor Caucus."
The word was introduced to Australia by King
O'Malley, an American-born Labor member of the first federal
Parliament in 1901; it presumably entered New Zealand politics at a
similar time. In New Zealand, the term is used by all political
parties, but in Australia, it is restricted to the Labor Party. For
the Australian
Liberal and
National parties, and for all parties in the UK and the
Republic of Ireland (not a Commonwealth country), the usual
term is "parliamentary party".
As in New Zealand, in Canada caucus refers
to all members of a particular party in Parliament, including
senators, or a provincial legislature. These
members elect among themselves a caucus chair
who presides over their meetings and is an important figure when
the party is in opposition
and an important link between cabinet and the backbench when the party is
in government.
The word can also be used to mean all the
deputies in an assembly who come from a certain geographical or
other background, for example "the Antarctic caucus."
In alternative dispute resolution
The term caucus is also used in mediation, facilitation and other forms
of
alternate dispute resolution to describe circumstances when,
rather than meeting at a common table, the disputants retreat to a
more private setting to process information, agree on negotiation
strategy, confer privately with counsel and/or with the mediator,
or simply gain "breathing room" after the often
emotionally-difficult interactions that can occur in the common
area where all parties are present. The degree to which caucuses
are used can be a key defining element, and often an identifier, of
the mediation model being used. For example, "facilitative
mediation" tends to discourage the use of caucuses and tries to
keep the parties talking at a single table, while "evaluative
mediation" may allow parties to separate more often and rely on the
mediator to shuttle information and offers back and forth.
Origin of the term
The origin of the word caucus is debated, but it
is generally agreed that it came into use in English in the
United
States. According to some sources, it comes from the Algonquian
word for "counsel," 'cau´-cau-as´u', and was probably introduced
into American politics through the
Democratic Party in New York known
as Tammany
Hall, which liked to use
Native American terms. Other sources claim that it derived from
Medieval Latin caucus, meaning
"drinking vessel", and link it to the Caucus Club of colonial
Boston. It
may also be derived from the Arabic word ,
"قوقعه", which means shell or enclosed area.
References
caucus in Catalan: Caucus
caucus in German: Caucus
caucus in Spanish: Caucus
caucus in French: Caucus
caucus in Hungarian: Jelölőgyűlés
caucus in Indonesian: Kaukus
caucus in Italian: Caucus
caucus in Hebrew: הבחירות המקדימות לנשיאות ארצות
הברית#.D7.90.D7.A1.D7.99.D7.A4.D7.95.D7.AA_.D7.94.D7.91.D7.97.D7.99.D7.A8.D7.94_.28Caucuses.29_.D7.91.D7.90.D7.99.D7.95.D7.95.D7.94
caucus in Dutch: Caucus (politiek)
caucus in Japanese: 党員集会
caucus in Portuguese: Caucus
caucus in Russian: Кокус
caucus in Simple English: Caucus
caucus in Thai: คอคัส
caucus in Chinese: 黨團會議
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
assemblee, assembly, assignation, at home,
ball, brawl, breakaway group,
by-election, camp, closed
primary, colloquium,
commission, committee, conclave, concourse, congregation, congress, congressional caucus,
congressional election, contested election, conventicle, convention, convocation, council, dance, date, diet, direct primary, division, eisteddfod, election, ethnic group,
faction, festivity, fete, forgathering, forum, gathering, general election,
gerrymander,
get-together, housewarming, interest, interest group,
levee, mandatory primary,
meet, meeting, minority group,
nonpartisan primary, offshoot, open primary,
optional primary, packed caucus, panel, partisan election, party, plenum, political party, politicize, preference
primary, presidential election, presidential preference primary,
presidential primary, pressure group, primary, primary election,
prom, quorum, rally, reception, referendum, rendezvous, runoff, runoff election, runoff
primary, seance, secret
caucus, sect, session, shindig, side, silent majority, sit-in,
sitting, soiree, splinter, splinter group,
symposium, synod, turnout, vocal minority,
wing