Political Parties
in the most solemn manner, against the baneful effects of the Who warned the nation of factions (group seeking to promote partisan interests) in the quote below? Let me… warn you, in the most solemn manner, against the baneful effects of the spirit of party.
What is a Political Party? Essential to representative government Provides party competition for power No member dues Party Identification: self-proclaimed preference
What do Parties Do? Nominate candidates Inform and inspire people to participate Articulate policies Coordinate policy making Act as watchdog
Why Two-Party System? No solid answers, a combination of answers Two-party rooted from beginning First two set precedent Single-member districts (one per office) Plurality (winner by largest # of votes cast) Easier to compare two people Pluralistic society (several distinct groups) Same yet different
Parties can be thought of in 3 parts: Party-in-the-electorate: identify with party Decline of both parties Upsurge of independents Party as organization: keep the party running National office, full-time staff, rules National Conventions (4 Years) National Committee Party-in-government: people in office Party control matters when official are elected
The Party in the Electorate
Party Organization 50 Party System: they are all different Well-organized Spend lots of money Some have more power than others Closed primaries Open primaries Blanket primaries Split-ticket voting Straight-ticket voting
National Chairpersons Democrats Tim Kaine, VA Republicans Michael Steele
Party Organization National organization National Convention: 4 yrs, write parties platform, nominate a candidate National Committee: composed of reps from states National Chairperson: person in charge of day-to-day activities of the National party
History of the Democrats and Republicans
Democrat & Republican Rap
Two-Party System Section 3 First Parties Federalist Alexander Hamilton, “Rich and well-born”, strong national gov’t, liberal interpretation of constitution Democratic-Republicans Thomas Jefferson, more sympathetic to common man, strict interpretation of Constitution
Political Eras Party Eras: dominance of one political party for a lengthy period of time Divided government: when executive and legislative branches are controlled by different parties
American Parties: Four Major Eras 1796-1824: The First Party System First party: Federalists 1828-1856: Jacksonian Democrats v. Whigs Modern party founded by Jackson Whigs formed to oppose Democrats 1860-1928: The Two Republican Eras Republicans rose as the antislavery party 1894 Depression kept Republicans in power 1932-1964: The New Deal Coalition Forged by the Democrats- relied upon urban working class, ethnic groups, Catholics and Jews, the poor, Southerners
The Era of the Democrats, 1800—1860 Democrats dominate all but two presidential elections. The Whig Party emerges in 1834, but declines by the 1850s, electing only two Presidents. The Republican Party is founded in 1854.
The Era of the Republicans, 1860—1932 Republicans dominate all but four presidential elections. The Civil War disables the Democratic Party for the remainder of the 1800s.
The Return of the Democrats, 1932—1968 Democrats dominate all but two presidential elections. Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt is elected President four times.
American Parties: Parties Today The Start of a New Era: The Era of Divided Government Since 1968, neither Republicans nor Democrats have dominated the presidency and Congress has often been controlled by the opposing party. 1968–1976 Republicans hold the presidency Congress is controlled by Democrats 1976–1980 Democrats hold the presidency Congress is controlled by Democrats 1980–1992 Republicans hold the presidency Senate controlled by Republicans 1980-1986, controlled by Democrats from 1986 to 1994 1992 – 2000 Democrats hold the presidency Congress controlled by Republicans, 1994 to present 2000 Republicans hold the presidency Congress is controlled by Republicans
Minor Parties 4 Types Ideological: particular set of beliefs (Socialist, Communist) Single-issue: focus on 1 public policy (Right to Life Party (against abortion) Economic: rooted in period of economical discontent (Populist 1890) Splinter: split from one of the major parties Bull Moose 1912 (Progressive Party)
Third Parties: Their Impact on American Politics Political parties other than Democrat or Republican Rarely win elections Third parties bring new groups and ideas into politics Two-party system discourages extreme views Spoiler role- “pull vote”
Summary Parties are a linkage institution Parties’ goal is to win elections Parties have operated in several distinct party systems or eras The current party system is one of divided government and weak parties But this trend is beginning to change 22