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Politics and Elections. The Origins of Political Parties. Madison’s view of “faction” First U.S. political parties: Federalists and Anti-Federalists Battle began over a strong central government vs. states’ and individual rights. “Congressional Pugilists,” a 1798 political cartoon.
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The Origins of Political Parties • Madison’s view of “faction” • First U.S. political parties: Federalists and Anti-Federalists • Battle began over a strong central government vs. states’ and individual rights “Congressional Pugilists,” a 1798 political cartoon
The Origin of Political Parties: Hamilton vs. Jefferson • Hamilton • Strong federal government • Jefferson • Limited national authority • Rule by elite • Believed in ability of farmers and common people to rule themselves • Loose interpretation of Constitution • Strict interpretation of Constitution • Favored national bank • Favored paying state debts • Opposed national bank • Supported merchants, landowners, investors, wealthy • Favored payment of national debt, not state debts • Tended to support Britain in foreign affairs • Tended to support France in foreign affairs • Followers formed the Democratic-Republican Party, which eventually became the Democratic Party • Followers formed the Federalist Party, which eventually became the Republican Party
The Evolution of Political Parties • Federalist Party: first U.S. political party • Democratic-Republicans formed in opposition to the Federalists • Democratic Party developed from the Democratic-Republicans • Whig Party arose to counter the Democratic Party Henry Clay Andrew Jackson Daniel Webster
The Evolution of Political Parties (continued) • The Republican Party rose from the ashes of the Whig Party • The Democratic Party lost influence from its association with the Southern states during the Civil War • The Republican Party became the dominant party in the second half of the 19th century • The Democratic Party regained support via the reform movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries An 1860 campaign poster for Abraham Lincoln
The Role of Political Parties • Parties organize individuals with similar ideas who work to effect political change • Citizens may freely choose their party affiliation, or opt to have none at all • Parties can represent a wide variety of interests • Parties aim to elect people to government who will help pass laws in their favor
Third Parties in a Two-Party System • Usually form in opposition to one or both major parties • Have had great influence without ever winning the presidency • Bring attention to important public issues ignored by the major parties • Complaints about third parties: • They take votes away from major candidates with similar positions • Supporting a third-party candidate “wastes” one’s vote Third-party poster from the 1912 presidential campaign
Discussion Questions • What are factions, and why did James Madison and many of the other Founders distrust them? • Trace the development of the first political parties in the United States. What were these parties, when did they arise, who led them, and who were their major supporters? • What is the role of a political party? How do third parties usually form? Do you think they are good for the American political system? Why or why not?
The Constitutional Basis for Presidential Elections • The Constitution’s Framers doubted the public’s ability to directly elect its leaders • Article II: Electors from each state vote directly for president • 1804: The 12th Amendment changed the electoral process to a presidential/vice-presidential ticket Verifying the Electoral College vote in the House of Representatives, 1913
The Presidential Election Process • The public votes for president in November every four years • The members of the Electoral College cast the official votes for president the next month, in December