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AP Government: Mrs. Lacks
Political Parties AP Government: Mrs. Lacks
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Political parties Political parties are an essential component of republican government What precisely is a political party? An organization that sponsors candidates for public office under the organization’s name, label, title, or banner
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Two-party system The US is a two-party system
Democratic Republican Most democracies have multiple parties
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Multi-Party Systems Country: # of parties represented in legislature
Australia: 7 Denmark:11 Germany: 5 Guatemala: 11 Iceland: 5 Israel: 12 Turkey: 4
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Multi-Party Systems Political Parties Represented in Danish Parliament: Venstre (Denmark’s Liberal Party) - The largest party in Denmark with 47 seats in parliament. It is led by ex PM Lars Løkke Rasmussen. Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterne) -The party has 44 of 179 seats in parliament. It is led by PM Helle Thorning-Schmidt. Danish People’s Party (Dansk Folkeparti) - The party has 22 seats in parliament. It is led by Pia Kjærsgaard. The Social Liberals (Det Radikale Venstre) - The party has 17 seats in parliament. It is led by Margrethe Vestager. Socialist People’s Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti) - The party has 16 seats in parliament. It is led by Villy Søvndal. Conservative People’s Party (Det Konservative Folkeparti) -The party has eight seats in parliament. It is led by Lars Barfoed. Unity List (Enhedslisten) - The party has 12 seats in parliament and has a collective leadership Liberal Alliance - The party has nine seats in parliament. It is led by Anders Samuelsen Greenland and the Faroes: two parties from each country have four seats in the Danish Parliament, three of which support the current Government.
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Political parties MOST potential voters do not know the differences between the two parties goals and philosophies, but assume they are quite dissimilar Because of this, many stereotypes are formed about each party
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Political party stereotypes
Democrats: a bunch of “do-gooders” and “bleeding-hearts” Have suspect “management skills” have weaker credentials/less experience in dealing with the economy Republicans: less compassionate than Democrats generally wealthier—are they the “country club” party? Economists
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What parties do 1. Nominate candidates for public office to represent the party’s message
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What parties do 2. Influence Policy
Members of the Senate and House of Reps are also members of political parties Senators and MCs from each party often work together to create and pass laws that support their party’s platform
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What parties do 3. Unite Government an organization/membership
federalism
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What parties do 4. Create balance – majority and minority
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What parties do 5. Inform citizens Run ads Distribute pamphlets
Post blogs Give speech advice Bc all this info is biased, citizens must seek other sources of info
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Political parties Major differences between Dems and Reps…
Size/scope of government Military Social services (welfare, unemployment) Health Care Immigration Education Privacy
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In the beginning… Our country has for most of its history been a two- party system, but not in the beginning There is no mention of political parties in the Constitution
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In the beginning… Federalist Paper #10
James Madison recognized the dangers inherent with factions (parties)
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First political parties formed
Original parties Federalists Strong central govt National bank Adams, Hamilton Democratic-Republicans Stronger state govts Jefferson, Madison
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Two-party system Neither lasted long
Oldest continuous political party: Democrats Started in 1820s 1st POTUS: Andrew Jackson Second oldest continuous political party: Republicans Started in 1850s after split of Whig Party Founded as the anti-slavery party 1st POTUS: Abraham Lincoln
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Realignment Elections
critical elections that produce a sharp change in existing patterns of party loyalty which last a prolonged period of time 5 is US history
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Realignment Elections
1. Democratic Republican Thomas Jefferson beats Federalist John Adams in 1800 2. Democratic Andrew Jackson beats Democratic Republican John Quincy Adams in 1828 3. Republican Abraham Lincoln wins in 1860 4. Republican McKinley beats Democrat Bryan in 1896* 5. Election of 1932 – Democrat FDR breaks 72 years of Republican domination (holds for 20 years; until end of WWII) Both candidates were new, new issues, voter alignment changed
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Other possibilities 1968 1980 1992
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Realignment Elections
Does not always refer to the executive We see this with mid-term elections as well Examples 1994: Republicans seized control of both chambers while Dem. Clinton was in office; Newt Gingrich & Dick Armey’s Contract with America created a coalition of voters supporting states’ rights, lower taxes, reduced federal gov’t intervention, an elimination of the welfare state, and support for Congressional term limits 2006: Democrats took both back due to a public disgruntled by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
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