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POLITICAL PARTIES DANGERS OF FACTIONS? OR, NECESSITY IN GOVERNING?

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Presentation on theme: "POLITICAL PARTIES DANGERS OF FACTIONS? OR, NECESSITY IN GOVERNING?"— Presentation transcript:

1 POLITICAL PARTIES DANGERS OF FACTIONS? OR, NECESSITY IN GOVERNING?

2 Madison’s Federalist 10 warned about inevitable factions. Parties have become necessary to get things done in government. They seek to unify government in order to overcome the systems of separation of powers and check and balances that divide government.

3 PARTY SYMBOLS AND THOMAS NAST

4 SIX PARTY SYSTEMS IN AMERICA 1796-1824: the 1st party system--Federalists v. Jeffersonian Democratic- Republicans Jeffersonian Republicans are the forerunners of today’s Democrat Party. Jefferson ‘triangulates’ by saying, “we are all Republicans, we are all Federalists”. Federalists disappear in national elections and we have a de facto one-party system until 1824.

5 1828-1856: The 2nd party system. Jacksonian Democrats v. Whigs Voter turnout sky-rockets. Congressional caucuses go and the party convention is born. Reaction to Jackson being denied Presidency in 1824, despite winning popular vote--the “corrupt bargain” (see next slide). “King” Jackson (12 vetoes, more than previous presidents combined) and nullification, slavery and Indian removal. Whigs were a party opposed to Jacksonian Democrats. Leaders were Henry Clay, Zachary Taylor, William Henry Harrison, and Daniel Webster, as well as a guy in Illinois named Lincoln.

6 Corrupt Bargain Electoral College, 1824 Voting by state in House, 1825. Note all of Clay’s states voted for Adams.

7 1860-1892: The 3rd party system. Republican Party emerges as the party against slavery and the party that saved the Union. Began as a 3rd party and will dominate for 75 years. 1896-1928: The 4th party system. Second period of Republican dominance with coalition of big business and working classes against Democratic rural interests. North vs. South and 1-party states. Factions within GOP--Old Guard vs. Progressives (Mugwumps)

8 1932-1964: The 5th party system. Democratic dominance begun under FDR and the New Deal. FDR’s grand coalition of urban dwellers, labor unions, Catholics, Jews, the poor, Southern Whites, Northern Blacks, and farmers. Enough benefits to keep everyone in the coalition happy.

9 1968-Present: The 6th party system: Era of Divided Gov’t Increased split ticket voting Presidents of one party with Congresses of the opposite party. De-alignment to independents. Nixon, Reagan, and Bush (41) built coalition of disenchanted white suburban middle class voters, Southern white Protestants, “hard hats”, and big business.

10 Clinton won twice due to his reclaiming of FDR’s grand coalition, especially Southern middle class moderates (“Reagan Democrats”). 1994’s Contract with America takeover of the Congress by the GOP ensures divided government, though Clinton was shrewd to move to the middle (ex.- welfare reform).

11 Election of 2000 gave us a GOP president who won only a minority of popular votes (not to mention the necessity of a Supreme Court decision to help determine the outcome), a 50-50 Senate (which became 50-49-1 Democratic Senate after Jeffords defection), and a House with a narrow GOP majority.

12 The historic 2008 election saw the nation choose an African-American Democrat as president and establish the Democrats as the majority party in both the House and Senate. However, the 2010 midterm election restored GOP control of the House.

13 Realignment

14 More and Maybe?

15 CURRENT GOVERNMENT President: Democrat Barack Obama http://www.whitehouse.gov/administrat ion/president_obama/http://www.whitehouse.gov/administrat ion/president_obama/ House: 242 GOP., 192 Dem, 1 Vacant (112th Congress, 1st Session) Senate: 51 Dem., 47 GOP, 2 Ind. (Dem. Lieberman, Sanders) http://www.270towin.com/2010_senate _election/ http://www.270towin.com/2010_senate _election/ Governors: 29 GOP, 20 Dems, 1 Independent (as of 2010) State Legislatures: Dems control 15 states, GOP controls 26 states, 8 states are split and 1 (Nebraska) is a unicameral nonpartisan state. (2011)

16 State Legislatures Upper House by party. Lower House by party. Based on 2010 election.

17 Governors

18 THIRD PARTIES

19 Issue-oriented/strong personality. They raise issues the main two won’t address. However, they don’t win. Two-party tradition and Electoral College’s winner-take-all system are obstacles. As is lack of money (Perot exception), media coverage, and getting on the ballot.

20 IMPACT OF PARTIES Congress: The majority party controls the committees, choose the chairmen and key leadership positions, and the “staffers” are partisan.

21

22 EXECUTIVE BRANCH Nearly all appointments to the White House Office are partisan. Many go to people from election campaigns (patronage). The development of the Civil Service System has greatly reduced the party influence over the bureaucracy.

23 JUDICIAL BRANCH: Nearly always partisan.

24 STATE/LOCAL Most state government positions are partisan. Many local government positions are nonpartisan.

25 PARTY WEAKNESSES Anyone can join/no dues or duties. Only active at election time. Most Americans are spectators. Small percentages of “Strong” Dems/GOP. Increase in Independents.

26 Tensions exist between “party regulars” and issue/purist loyalists. Not responsive to social reform/Party “passiveness”. Traditional functions weakened: nomination of candidates, funding of campaigns, unifying government, and providing patronage. Decentralized: Each is organized along federal model--National Convention-->National Committee-->State Committees-->County Committees.

27 Neither the Democratic National Committee nor the Republican National Committee has true clout over the state and local committees. Neither has any real power to “punish” those who stray from the party line.

28 PARTY REFORM Abuses: Control of nominations by “bosses” like Tweed of Tammany Hall or corruption of “political machines” like Mayor Richard Daley. They often excluded the poor, the young, and minorities.

29 PROGRESSIVE ERA Direct Primaries Nonpartisan elections at state and local levels. Civil Service expansion. Initiative, referendum, recall. 17th Amendment Image at right is of Lincoln Steffens, the muckraker, fighting Tammany Hall and its election abuses.

30 OTHER WEAKENING FACTORS Candidate-centered campaigns. Rise of campaign consultants--they take over many functions of the party. Public disenchantment with politics (Watergate). Growth of interest groups and their role in advertising. Candidates’ reliance on mass media to get message across.

31 PARTY RESURGENCE National party organizations are better funded than in the past. Soft money donations to national parties, though now banned, were important factors in elections in the 1990’s. State parties are making use of soft money. Both parties, with better funding, hold training sessions for candidates: how to plan, raise funds, organize. Very strong party unity scores within Congress: 70%-80%.

32 Party Affiliation

33 Party Identification

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