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Published byTheodore Farmer Modified over 9 years ago
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Definition: Political Party: A Group of people with broad common interests organized to win elections, control government, and influence policies (laws). A. One-Party Systems: The party is in effect the government. B. Two-Party Systems: Two major parties compete for power. C. Multi-Party Systems: Several parties combine to form a coalition. Politically unstable – new elections.
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Third Party: Any party other than one of the two major parties. Why form? Believe neither major party is meeting certain needs. A. Types of Third Parties/Minor Parties 1. Single-Issue party: 2. Ideological Party: 3. Splinter Party: B. Impact of Third Parties 1. Influence outcome of elections by taking votes away from major candidates 2. Promote ideas that are unpopular or hotly debated.
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C. Obstacles for Third Parties 1. Difficulty getting name on ballot in all 50 states. 2. Finances 3. Image: must appeal to the entire nation not just one region or group. 4. Winner-Take-All System
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A. Recruiting Candidates (election vs. issue) B. Educating the public on important issues C. “Watchdog” over party in power D. Reduction of conflict E. Dispense favors- Reward loyal supporters with jobs and government appointments.
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A. Primary and Caucus Primary: Narrows the list of candidates from a party for an upcoming election Caucus: A local meeting in which party members get together to choose delegates for state conventions and express candidate preferences B. National convention -Every four years during the summer -Delegates select a ticket (president & vice-president) that will be on the ballot for the general election in November C. General Election -Every four years in November
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