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Inside the Philippine Context. Political Party System: Theoretical Discourse. About Political Parties. Born out of practice or promise of elections and representative government. Major initial steps in creation of party organization: British Electoral reforms in 1832, 1867, and 1884.
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Inside the Philippine Context Political Party System: Theoretical Discourse
About Political Parties • Born out of practice or promise of elections and representative government. • Major initial steps in creation of party organization: British Electoral reforms in 1832, 1867, and 1884. • “When suffrage is greatly restricted, local electoral committees are simply not needed.
About Political Parties • It is argued that the first political parties were formed as the end products of the desire of various social forces to have their interests articulated and represented in the government. • Today, it is the embodiment of the very interests and issues that divide their societies as a whole.
About Political Parties • A political party can be defined as: • A group of people organized for the purpose of winning government power, by electoral, or other means. • Incorporates a diversity of political interests within its fold. • United by a definite set of party programs, and together attempt to push a consistent line of policy.
About Political Parties • According to Robert Bone: • It has an organizational structure with lines of authority and power distribution; • Seek to attract popular support via votes; • Recruit and field candidates for elective positions (usually based on the person’s adherence on the party’s ideology and programs)
About Political Parties • Thus, an interest group becomes a political party when it seeks to place its members in elective positions.
Typology of Parties • Can be subdivided into several categories based on the ff. characteristics: • Membership • Arena of Activities • Ideological orientation
Typology of Parties: Membership • Mass Parties- open to all types and classes of persons • Cadre Parties- high degree of centralization and ideological unity (adopt proactive, rather than reactive political strategies) • Devotee Parties- center on a person rather than shared ideas or platforms
Typology of Parties: Arena of Activities • Constitutional Parties- operate within the boundaries of the existing political system • Revolutionary Parties- seek the destruction of the existing ones via rebellion or revolution
Typology of Parties: Ideological Orientation • Left (i.e Bolshevism, Maoism)- seek the social prioritization of the goal of economic equality and an “active state” to destroy what they believe to be fundamental inequalties present in society. • Center (liberal)- laissez faire; minimum state role in the economy
Typology of Parties: Ideological Orientation • Center- Right- believes that government policy should not target specific groups to the detriment of others; but to provide peace and order, defense, and to ensure legal contracts are properly enforced; and that policies for that enhance social progress are those that provide meaningful incentives for work, not costly government programs that purposely benefit specific groups in society.
Typology of Parties: Ideological Orientation • Center- Left- different from the Far- Left by their disavowal of violence and coercion. • Equitable distribution of wealth is still a social goal that should be realized through proper state intervention • However, people affected must be the final arbitrator as to whether this is desirable
Typology of Parties: Ideological Orientation • Right- conservatism and exclusionism; believes in natural differences among humans and there are races, religions, classes more fit to rule than others
The Functions of Parties • Linkage • Interest Articulation and aggregation • Socialization and Mobilization • Representation
The Functions of Parties • Governance Functions • Political Recruitment • Consolidating the operations of government • Fiscalization and Feedback
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Party System • May be defined as the pattern of relationships existing between parties in a given polity • Note: The mere existence of parties does not automatically presuppose the existence of a party system
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Condition of party activities • Political party Systems are either competitive or non-competitive. • Non-Competitive- when all political activities are prohibited by the State, save for those of the ruling party. • Political activities of other parties and interest groups are strictly regulated or banned.
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Competitive Systems allow all political parties to openly contest for power. • Electoral Mechanism is the main dispenser of the political power, guided by the laws formulated for its orderly exercise.
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Number of active political parties • One-Party System- similar to a non-competitive system • Prevalent in socialist-communist systems dominated by the Leninist concept of “vanguardism” and the populist movements that dominated in Africa and Asia after decolonization.
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Two-Party System- although a number of minor parties exist, only two parties enjoy sufficient electoral and legislative strength to have a realistic prospect of winning government power • The Larger Party of the Two at any time is able to rule alone (usually via legislative majority); the other provides the opposition. • Power alternatives between the two; both are electable; opposition serves as the government in the wings
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Multi-Party System • Exists when electoral system is open to numerous parties. • Usual strategy: “coalition” politics • Usually forms power blocs for control since no party can control the government at any given time
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Just because there are many parties, it does not mean that it constitute a “full” multi-party system, since in reality in can be dominated by one party. • Distinguishing feature of it: Dispersal of Votes • Can be further divided as dominant or loose type.
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Loose Multi-Party System • If three or more parties routinely gets more than 15% of the votes • In that case, these three usually negotiate and compromise amongst themselves to form a government. • Prevalent in Italy, France, and Spain.
Party Systems: Definition and Types • Dominant Multi-Party System • If one party regularly wins the elections in a multi-party system. • Example: Liberal Democratic Party in Japan (38 straight years
Effects of an Electoral Systems on Party System • Elections become important to the construction of a party system, not its type of government. • Party Systems and governments are shaped by other factors, like political culture, class division and electoral preferences, etc.
Effects of an Electoral Systems on Party System • Elections become important to a construction of a party system because they reflect the essential values that a system holds. • Elections, as the formal structures that translate voter support into political representation, affects the party system as an “intermediary force”.
Effects of an Electoral Systems on Party System • It influences the behavior of parties competing for political power, their strategies for campaigning and governing, as well as the stability of their rulership.