The Limits of Participation provides an historical account of the Canadian Reform Party, which shattered the established pattern of Canadian party politics in the late twentieth century.
Faron Ellis provides an analysis of the party's development as it struggled to build an organization capable of bridging the policy demands of its members with the strategic plans of its leaders. The book examines the party from the perspective of its members by focusing on the opinion structure of activists who helped found Reform, build it into Canada's official opposition, and eventually decommission it in pursuit of power.
The book provides an empirically rich account of key elements of the party's history and a useful reality check on 'the limits of participation' - the gap between the rhetoric of populist parties and the realpolitik of Canadian politics.
—Graham White, University of Toronto Quarterly
The Reform Party may be no more, but this book still has much to tell us… as a good case study of the 'limits of participation', it should be read by all those interested in the place and possibilities of internal party democracy. As a study of the domestication of an anti-establishment party (its successor won the January 2006 national general election), it should be read by all those interested in the forces changing the shape of the contemporary party systems.
Party Politics
Ellis provides a useful corrective to previous views of Reform's membership as merely passive adherents of their leader's pronouncements.
—Trevor Harrison, The Canadian Historical Review