Introduction to Chapter 9

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Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Chapter 9 Political Parties Introduction to Chapter 9

Pop Quiz 9 Log on to www.socrative.com Join room 917563. Take the quiz using the notes you took. You may not use the handouts…only the notes you took about them. You may use the questions you answered, too.

Political Parties Political parties are groups with broad common interests that seek to elect candidates to offices to influence the government. Supply candidates labels to help the electorate identify. Our political parties have become decentralized like our government.

Arenas of Politics for Parties Label In the minds of voters—weakening More split –ticket voting Organization Recruiting and campaigning for candidates—parties have weakened Set of leaders Organize and try to control the legislative and executive branches

US Parties v. Parties Abroad Labels more important than candidates names Parties nominate their candidates for office-No primaries Campaigns run by the party Most election decisions made at the national level Legis. Controls who chief executive will be Join parties by paying dues & attending meetings Parties sponsor unions, clubs & social activities Candidate names w/ labels Individuals choose to run Campaigns run by the candidate States & localities make decisions about elections Voters choose party’s nominees in primaries Exec. & Legis. Branches are separate People do not “join” parties Social & political lives rarely overlap Try to win to influence government Provide a label to assist voters Help recruit candidates to run Loyalty to parties has decreased everywhere

Chart Summary European parties are disciplined gatekeepers. Voters are very loyal, but is declining US Federal system decentralizes power. Early on, government decisions were made at state and local levels & held most jobs National parties were coalitions of local parties As political power became centralized, parties decentralized & weakened

Chart Summary State and federal election laws weakened parties. Candidates chosen today mainly through primaries-not by parties. President elected separately from Congress. Presidential appointees are drawn from many sources.

American Political Culture Parties relatively unimportant in day-to-day life. Most Americans do not “join” parties like Europeans—simply vote. Dues, attend meetings, control unions, etc. Americans separate political parties from other aspects of life. Most parts nonpartisan, growing number of independents

The Rise & Decline of Political Parties The Founding (to 1820’s) Founders disliked parties-factions For parties to be acceptable, distinction between policy disputes and challenges to the legitimacy of government had to be made.

The Founding (to 1820’s) What’s in a name? Discuss letters and Washington’s farewell address Jefferson’s Democratic Republicans Hamilton’s Federalists What were the results of the rivalry? Elections Speeches Successors Few homogeneous interests, heterogeneous coalitions

Jefferson versus Hamilton What are the major differences between the 2 visions? Whose vision for America was best during the Washington administration & why? How do the views of each man line up with today’s political parties? Which side’s view is best for our country today? Why? How did GW feel about the rivalry?

The Jacksonians (to Civil War) Political participation became a phenomenon. More voters to be reached. More voters enfranchised By 1832, pres. Electors selected by popular vote in most states. Party built from the bottom, up. Abandonment of party caucuses composed of Congress members Beginning of party convention, allowing local control

The Civil War & Sectionalism (1860-1930’s) Jacksonian system unable to survive civil war Why did the new Republican dominate? Began as 3rd party Relied on Union pride during war WJ Bryan’s creation of sectionalism North Republican, South Democrat

The Civil War & Sectionalism (1860-1930’s) Most states were dominated by one party Factions emerged in each party Republicans “Old Guard” (party people) versus “mugwumps” (reformers, issues) Progressives often shifted loyalty initially, but then attacked Republican partisanship

The Era of Reform Progressives pushed measures to curtail party power and influence. Primaries over party conventions More nonpartisan elections locally & some statewide No party-business alliances due to corruption Strict voter registration requirements to reduce fraud Civil service to replace patronage Allow initiatives and referendums for voters

The Era of Reform Effects of the Progressives Reduced the worst forms of political corruption Weakened all political parties Office holders less accountable to parties Less coordination across the branches Reduced voter turnout Succeeded in using media to promote ideas

Party Realignments Critical or realigning periods: Periods during which a sharp, lasting shift occurs in the popular coalition supporting one or both parties. Issues that separate the two parties change, and so the kinds of voters that support each party change.

Party Realignments There have been 6 distinct realignments so far in US history: Early 1800s: Jeffersonian “Republicans” defeated the Federalists 1828 Antebellum: Rise of Jacksonian Democrats Civil War/Reconstruction: The collapse of the Whigs, Rise of the Republicans 1896: The Republicans defeat of WJ Bryan 1932: The Democrats under FDR 1968: Social Movements & Southern Shift begins

What are the kinds of realignments? Disappearance of a major party Examples: 1800, 1860 Voters shift from one party to another Examples: 1896, 1932, 1968-present The clearest cases of realignment are over social and economic issues…1860, 1896, 1932

Recent Trends Why was 1980 not a realignment? 2 reasons… How has the South shifted in Presidential elections? Why? Why may dramatic realignments not occur again? (De-alignment)

Party Decline What is the proof that parties are declining? Party id declining-More independents More split ticket voting Office Bloc Balloting Non-Partisan Elections: Exs?

Read pp. 212-225 in Chapter 9 For the sections on National, state & local parties (pp.212-220), Take down vocabulary but focus on structure of the parties. For the sections on 2-party system & minor parties (pp. 220-225) focus on the “workings” of each in our electoral system. Complete the CT packet on alternative voting systems.