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Political Parties. Kelly Walker US Government. Assignment. Go to: http://www.learner.org/courses/democracyinamerica/dia_12/ Click on the readings tab
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Political Parties Kelly Walker US Government
Assignment • Go to: http://www.learner.org/courses/democracyinamerica/dia_12/ • Click on the readings tab Read the Introduction—Political Parties: Mobilizing Agents and answer this question: What are mobilizing agents and how do they link citizens to government participation?
Objectives • Understand the origins of political parties in the United States • Identify and describe the three major periods of single-party domination and describe the current era of divided government. • Understand the role of political parties in the US system of government
What is a Party? • Political Party: a group of persons, joined together on the basis of common principles, who seek to control government through the winning of elections and the holding of political office • Democrats and Republicans
What Do Parties Do? • Essential to democratic Government • Political Efficacy: Citizens faith and trust in government and their own belief that they can understand and influence political affairs • Behind the development of broad policy and leadership choices • “Power Brokers”: Bring conflicting groups together- compromise • Structure the Voting Choice
Functions • Nominating Candidates • Informing and Activating Supporters (news media/interest groups) • Bonding Agent: Ensure their candidates are qualified/good character • Governing: Partisanship: government action based on firm allegiance to a political party and its policies • Acting as a Watchdog
Parties in American History The history of political progress in the U.S. is largely the history of partisan change • The "mainsprings" of political development are realignments • Loosely defined as: events that result in the emergence of a new majority party, or in the reshuffling of coalitions with-in parties to change the nature of the majority party • Realignments are “durable shifts in party support.” • There have been at least five in American history • Each has been associated with major changes in policy
Party Realignments Periods when a major, lasting shift occurs in the popular coalition supporting one or both parties Two Major Types of Realignments 1. Party actually dies 2. Voters shift support from one party to another (economics or issue driven) 1800- end of the Federalists 1828- Jackson Democrats came to power 1860- Whigs collapsed- Republicans came to power 1896- Republicans defeated Bryan 1932- Democrats under Roosevelt
The Nation’s First Parties- Started from the conflict over ratification of the Constitution: The Pre-party Period • Federalists- 1st political party. 1. Leader- Alexander Hamilton 2. Most Federalists were “the rich and the well-born.” 3. Beliefs a. A strong executive b. Policies to correct the nation’s economic ills. c. Loose interpretation of the Constitution 4. Supporters • financial interests • Manufacturing • commercial interests
B. Democratic-Republicans • Leader- Thomas Jefferson • More concerned with the “common man.” • Beliefs • Congress should dominate the new government • Limited role of the new government • Strict interpretation of the Constitution. • Supporters • small shopkeepers • Laborers • farmers
C. Election of 1796 http://www.270towin.com/ • First election with a Federalist against a Democratic-Republican • John Adams (Federalist) defeated Thomas Jefferson (D-R) by 3 electoral votes.
First Party System: Realignment of 1800 • Thomas Jefferson elected president • Jeffersonian Democrats replace the Federalists as the majority party • Policy change from a strong national government, centralized power, and government policies designed to benefit business to ... • Policies predicated on a rural country, small farmers, less government, more equality • Federalists Ceased being a viable electoral party • This "party system" ends in early 1820s with virtual one party rule --- the "era of good feelings"
II. The Era of the Democrats, 1800-1860 • Era of Good Feeling- Democrat-Republicans face no opposition from 1816-1824 • Factions develop after 1824 • Whig party develops after 1828 election
D. Democrats 1828 • Leader- Andrew Jackson • Supporters mostly from the south and west a. small farmers b. debtors c. frontier pioneers d. slave holders
3. Fundamental changes made under Democrats • voting rights for all males • spread of the spoils system • a huge increase in the number of elected offices around the country
E. Whig Party • Leaders: Henry Clay, Daniel Webster • Supporters a. Eastern bankers b. merchants and industrialists c. large southern plantation owners F. Era ends over theissue of slavery • Whigs collapse (Clay and Webster die) • Democrats split into 2 sharply divided groups, North and South. G. Republican party develops • Whigs and antislavery Democrats. • Starts in 1854.
III. The Era of the Republicans, Realingment of 1860-1932 • The Civil War brings the beginning of the second era of one-party domination. • Republicans 1. Lincoln was the first Republican president. 2. Republican Supporters • Business and financial interests • Farmers • Laborers • Newly freed African Americans C. Democrats • Crippled by the Civil War • Maintain control in the “Solid South.”
D. Election of 1896 • William McKinley- Republican a. Favored the Gold Standard b. Supported big business, monopolies and the railroads. 2. William Jennings Bryan - Democrat a. Favored free silver b. Supported by farmers and newly emerging unions
Return of the Democrats1932-1968 A. Depression brings about a shift in the perception of the role of government in society and return Democrats to power • Franklin D. Roosevelt- Strong Social Welfare programs • Democrat Supporters a. Southerners b. Small Farmers c. Organized labor d. Big-City political organizations
Fifth Party System:Realignment of 1932 • Brought on by the Great Depression • GOP President Herbert Hoover very unpopular • 1. conservative • 2. considered aloof • 3. believes in riding out the storm • Democrats rally around FDR • 1. promises at first to do something -- compassionate • 2. later adopts a liberal, activist agenda • Democrats sweep into power nationally in 1932 elections, filters down to state elections over next several decades
Coalition Crackup Question --- is New Deal realignment still operative? • Coalition undermined by defection of Solid South over racial matters • beginning in 1948, white southerners began to vote for Republicans (or Independents) at presidential level • Labor and many northern poor have defected to GOP on occasion over economic and crime issues- Reagan Democrats • Some Catholics have defected over abortion • Obviously, coalition is not as strong as it once was
Divided Government • Nixon (R) won in 1968 (left in 1972 over Watergate) • Ford (R) could not beat Jimmy Carter (D) in 1976 • Carter hindered by Iranian hostage crisis and loses to Ronald Reagan (R) • Reagan retires and George H. Bush (R) becomes president • Clinton (D) defeats Bush in 1992 • Clinton retires and George W. Bush (R) becomes president in very close elections with Gore and Kerry • Democrats take back the White House and Congress in the 2008, election – Democrats hold the White House and the Senate in 2012.
Why a Two Party System? • Historical: Founding Fathers, “agents of divisiveness and disunity” • Force of Tradition: Began with a two-party system, has always been a two-party system • The Electoral System: Single Member District- winner take all; only one can win or plurality- the largest number of votes wins. Both parties Shape election laws to protect the two-party system • American Ideological Consensus(general agreement): All Americans share the same ideals, principles and patterns of belief
Both Parties… • Are moderate (“Big Tent” Ideology) • Try to attract as many voters as possible • Are built on compromise and try to occupy the middle of the road • Take policy positions that do not differ a great deal from those of the other major party
Party Decay? • Proportion of people who identify with a party on the decline since 1960. • Split ticket voting increase • Electoral Dealignment? A lessening of party loyalties in voting decisions
Party Ideology • Liberal: advocates change, new philosophies, new ideas (Left, Democrats) • Conservative: Avoids change, status quo or return to earlier times (Right, Republicans)
LIBERALS • Usually embrace freedom of choice in personal matters • Support significant government control of the economy and advocate regulation of business • Favor environmental regulations • Defend civil liberties and free expression • Support government action to promote equality, and tolerate diverse lifestyles.
Conservatives • Tend to favor economic freedom and a free-market economy • Frequently support laws to restrict personal behavior that violates traditional values • Oppose excessive government control of business • Endorses government action to defend morality and the traditional family structure • Support a strong military • Oppose bureaucracy and high taxes, • Endorse strong law enforcement
Are you Liberal or Conservative? • Balanced Politics • Quiz • Political Spectrum: • Communism ---- Social Democracy ----- Liberalism ----- Centrism ----- Conservatism ----- Reactionism ----- Fascism • http://www.gallup.com/poll/151943/record-high-americans-identify-independents.aspx
Multiparty Systems • Several major and many minor parties control government • Based on economic class, interest, religious belief, or political ideology • Broader representation of the electorate • Greater choice • Coalitions: temporary alliance of several groups who come together to form a working majority and control the government • Europe, other mature democracies
One Party Systems • Dictatorships (China, Cuba) • Party of the ruling group/person • Many states always vote either for Democrats or Republicans
Democrats: http://www.democrats.org/ African Americans Catholics Jews Union Members Latinos Other minorities Professionals Farmers Educated Women Republicans: http://www.rnc.org/ White Males Protestants Business Community Party Membership Patterns
Party Membership Patterns People identify with a party: • Family • Events (War, Depression) • Economic Status (Higher: Republican, lower: Democrats) • Age • Place of Residence • Level of Education • Work Environment
Minor Parties • Difficult to describe and classify • Usually based on one idea or issue • Short-Lived • Have no shot of electing a president to office
Minor Parties Four Types: • Ideological Parties: Based on a particular set of beliefs (Marxist’s and Libertarian) • Single-Issue Party: Focus on one public-policy matter (Right to Life Party) • Economic Protest Parties: Rooted in periods of economic turmoil (Greenback’s) • Splinter Parties: Split away from the major parties (Bull Moose)
Why Minor Parties are Important • First used a national convention to recruit presidential candidates (1831) • Spoiler Role • Critic and innovator of major parties- take stands on controversial issues (progressive income tax: Larger % from higher income, lower % from lower income. Gun control, women’s suffrage, old-age pensions)
Minor Parties • Reform Party: Ross Perot • Libertarian Party • Natural Law • Constitution • Socialist • Prohibition • Green • http://www.americafirstparty.org/ • http://www.gp.org/index.php
Social Movements • What is a social movement? • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_movement • The Tea Party • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_Party_movement • Occupy Wall Street • http://occupywallst.org/
Party Organization • Decentralized, Fragmented, Disjointed • Full of factions • Internal squabbling • No chain of command from National to State to Local level • Local units independent of State units • http://www.c-spanclassroom.org/VideoDetail.aspx?video_id=423
Party Organization • The Role of the Presidency: Party more cohesive and organized. President is party leader- minor party leaderless/powerless • Impact of Federalism: Government is decentralized, so are parties • Nominating Process: candidate selection is an intraparty process and the process is divisive. Members within each party fight for nomination, fragments the party. • http://c-spanclassroom.org/VideoDetail.aspx?Video_ID=426
Political Parties 3 components: • Party Organization: Decides leaders • Party in the electorate: Those who vote the straight party ticket • Party in Government: Office holders Weakened state of the party: • Sharp drop in loyal party voters • Increase in split-ticket voting • Reform: Parties more open, more fragmented • Use of the Media • Growth of single-issue organizations