"Politics is a good thing!" is the slogan of Dr.
Larry J. Sabato. According to the Wall Street Journal, Dr. Sabato is
"probably the most quoted college professor in the land" while the
Washington Post called him "the Mark McGwire of political analysts" and
he is dubbed by Fox News Channel as "America's favorite political
scientist." More recently, the Washingtonian magazine called him the
"Dr. Phil of American politics." As founder and director of the
University of Virginia's Center for Politics, Dr. Sabato bridges the
gap between the ivory tower and the real world on issues of critical
importance to American democracy and the challenges facing our
political process.
The Robert Kent Gooch Professor of Politics at the
University of Virginia, Dr. Sabato is at home both in the classroom and
in the anchor booth. He is just one of a dozen University Professors
at U.Va and is a former Rhodes Scholar and Danforth Fellow. After he
received his B.A. in government from the University of Virginia as a
Phi Beta Kappa in 1974, he did a year's graduate study in public policy
at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and
International Affairs. Upon receipt of the Rhodes scholarship in 1975,
he left Princeton to begin study at Queen's College, Oxford University.
In less than two years he received his doctorate in politics from
Oxford and was invited to become an instructor for students in the
Politics, Philosophy, and Economics (PPE) program. In January 1978 he
was elected Lecturer in Politics at New College, Oxford. He joined the
faculty at the University of Virginia in September 1978.
Dr. Sabato's latest book, DIVIDED STATES OF AMERICA:
The Slash and Burn Politics of the 2004 Presidential Election (Longman,
2005), breaks down the 2004 races and provides a jumping off point for
the 2006 and 2008 contests. In addition to Get in the Booth! A Citizen's Guide to the 2006 Midterm Elections (Longman, 2006), Dr. Sabato is also regularly updating Sabato's Crystal Ball,
a critically acclaimed election analysis website which predicted
results for the 2002 and 2004 elections, and looks ahead to the
contests of 2006 and 2008.
The author of over twenty books and countless essays on the American political process, his most recent books are Get in the Booth! A Citizen's Guide to the 2004 Election (Longman, 2004), Midterm Madness: The Elections of 2002 (Rowman & Littlefield 2003), Overtime: The Election 2000 Thriller (Longman, 2001), and Dangerous Democracy: The Battle Over Ballot Initiatives in America (Rowman & Littlefield, 2001). Others include Peepshow: Media and Politics in an Age of Scandal (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000), Toward the Millennium: The Elections of 1996 (Allyn and Bacon, 1997), and Dirty Little Secrets: The Persistence of Corruption in American Politics (Random House/Times Books, 1996).
Prior to the publication of these volumes, Dr. Sabato's best known book was entitled Feeding Frenzy: Attack Journalism & American Politics.
Originally published in 1991 and again in 1993 by the Free
Press/Macmillan, the book made the now universally used phrase a part
of the political lexicon and is required reading for anyone involved in
politics today. An updated edition was published by Lanahan Press in
2000.
Five of Dr. Sabato's other well-known books are: PAC Power: Inside the World of Political Action Committees, which focuses on the phenomenal growth of PACs and their influence on American elections); The Party's Just Begun: Shaping Political Parties for America's Future (Little Brown and Co., 1988), which examines the condition of the political parties and proposes ways to strengthen them; Paying for Elections (The Twentieth Century Fund, 1989), which advocates reforms in the financing of campaigns; Campaigns and Elections (Scott, Foresman, 1989), a source book of the new techniques used in American politics; and American Government: Continuity and Change (Addison Wesley Longman), co-authored with Karen O'Connor of American University (5th Edition - 2002).
Dr. Sabato's earlier books include an investigation of
the influential corps of American political consultants and their new
campaign technologies (such as polling, direct mail, and television
advertising) entitled, The Rise of Political Consultants: New Ways of Winning Elections (New York: Basic Books, 1981); and a study of American state governors over thirty years, Goodbye to Good-Time Charlie: The American Governorship Transformed
(Washington, D. C.: Congressional Quarterly Press, 1983-Second
Edition). Other books and monographs have been written about Virginia
politics, including a study of the rise and fall of the Democratic
machine in Virginia, The Democratic Party Primary: Tantamount to Election No Longer (Charlottesville: The University Press of Virginia, 1977). He is the author of the nine-volume Virginia Votes series chronicling all state elections, as well as many articles on national and state politics.
Dr. Sabato has served on many national and state
commissions, including the National Commission for the Renewal of
American Democracy, the U.S. Senate Campaign Finance Reform Panel, the
Governor's Commission on Campaign Finance Reform, Government
Accountability, and Ethics, and the Governor's Blue Ribbon Commission
on Higher Education. Far more importantly, however, he has had the
privilege to teach approximately 13,000 students during his career.
Dr. Sabato is the recipient of more than two-dozen
major scholarships, grants, and academic awards, including a National
Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, the Outstanding Young Teacher
Award from the University of Virginia, and Outstanding Professor Award
from the Virginia State Council of Higher Education, the U.Va.
Outstanding Professor Award of 2000, and inclusion among the
"Top-Ten-All-Time Favorite Teachers" by U.Va.'s Alumni Association. His
visiting appointments include that of Guest Scholar at the Brookings
Institution and Thomas Jefferson Visiting Fellow at Downing College,
Cambridge University, England. In 2002, the University of Virginia
conferred upon Dr. Sabato its highest honor, The Thomas Jefferson
Award, given annually to one individual since 1955.
At the University of Virginia Center for Politics
(www.centerforpolitics.org), founded in 1998, Dr. Sabato brings his
years of academic study together with an equally long career as both a
political practitioner and commentator on local, state and national
elections. The Center represents Dr. Sabato's mission: to improve civic
education and the political process, and in doing so make government
more relevant, more accessible and more meaningful for the average
American. The Center has a dedicated staff of over a dozen, and its
signature program, the National Youth Leadership Initiative, currently
involves over 800,000 middle and high school students in all 50 states.
In six years, Sabato has raised over $7 million in public and private
funds to support the Center's many programs, conferences, and
publications.