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WHAT IS A POLITICAL PARTY?

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Title: WHAT IS A POLITICAL PARTY?


1
WHAT IS A POLITICAL PARTY?
  • A party is a group that seeks to elect candidates
    to public office by supplying them with a label
    after winning elections

2
Political Parties
  • Chapter 7

3
Functions of Political Parties
  •  
  • Connecting citizens to their government
  • Running candidates for political office
  • Informing the public
  • Organizing the government

4
  • Why a Two Party System?
  • One out of 15 democracies in the world today has
    two party systems.
  • 3 factors contribute to our two party system
  • Consensus of values
  • Historical influence
  • The Winner-Take-All System

5
  • Differences from European parties
  • US Federal system decentralizes power
  • a. Early on, most people with political jobs
    worked for state and local government
  •  b. National parties were coalitions of
    local parties
  • c. As political power becomes more centralized,
    parties become weaker still

6
  • 2. Parties closely regulated by state and federal
    laws
  • 3. Candidates chosen through primaries, not by
    party leaders
  • 4. President elected separately from
    Congress     

7
The rise and fall of the political party
  • The Founding (to the 1820s)
  • Founders' dislike of factions George Washington
    on Political Parties

It (Parties) agitates the community with
ill-founded jealousies and false alarms kindles
the animosity of one part against another
8
  • 2. Emergence of Republicans, Federalists
    Jefferson versus Hamilton
  • b. Republicans' success and Federalists' demise

v.
9
The Era of Good Feeling
  • Jefferson emerged as the most popular leader at
    the turn of the nineteenth century.
  • The two parties' points of view seemed to merge
    most notably in the "Era of Good Feeling"
    presided over by James Monroe, one of Jefferson's
    protégés.
  • The Democratic-Republicans emerged as the only
    party, and their dominance lasted until the
    mid-1800's, though under a new name, the Democrats

10
  • The Jacksonians (to the Civil War)
  • 1. Political participation a mass phenomenon
  • a. More voters to reach
  • b. Party built from the bottom up
  • c. Abandonment of presidential caucuses
  •  d. Beginning of national conventions to allow
    local control
  • e. More local control, especially to the states

11
  • The Civil War and Sectionalism
  • 1. Jacksonian system unable to survive slavery
    issue. As economic and social tensions developed
    between North and South by the 1840's and 50's,
    Whig party unity was threatened by splits between
    the Southern and Northern wings- become the
    Republican Party.
  • A new Republican Party emerged from the issue of
    expansion of slavery into new territories.
  • 2. New Republicans become dominant because of
  • Civil War and Republicans on Union sideParty
    would dominate U.S. politics from
    1860-1932

12
  • Democrats became fractured after the Civil War
  • William Jennings Bryan alienation of northern
    Democrats in 1896
  • Democrats will then regain control after 1932
    election

13
  •  3. In most states one party predominates
  •  a. Party professionals, or "stalwarts," one
    faction in GOP
  • b. Mugwumps (group of independent Republicans
    that broke away for good government),
    Progressives, or "reformers" another faction
  • Most famous mugwumps
  • Mark Twain

14
  • The era of reform
  • 1. Progressive push measures to curtail parties
  • Primary elections
  • No party-business alliances
  • Strict voter registration requirements
  • Civil service reform
  • Initiative and referendum elections

15
The national party structure today
  • Parties similar on paper
  • National convention ultimate power nominates
    presidential candidate
  • 2. National committee composed of delegates from
    states
  • 3. Congressional campaign committees
  • 4. National chair manages daily work

16
The Era of Divided Government 1969-2003
  • With a few exceptions, control of the legislature
    and the presidency has been "divided" between the
    two major political parties since the late 1940s.
  • The division brings with it the problem of
    "gridlock", or the tendency to paralyze decision
    making, with one branch advocating one policy and
    the other another, contradictory policy.

17
  • Party structure diverges in the late 1960s
  • 1. RNC moves to bureaucratic structure a
    well-financed party devoted to electing its
    candidates
  • 2. Democrats move to factionalized structure to
    distribute power
  • 3. RNC uses computerized mailing lists to raise
    money

18
  • National Conventions
  • Large party gatherings with the purpose to elect
    a candidate for office. Nowadays its just a
    rubber-stamping of the results of the primaries.
  • Main goal is to announce candidate to the public
    and establish platform.

19
  • National conventions
  • 1. National committee sets time and place issues
    call setting number of delegates for each state
  • 2. Formulas used to allocate delegates
  • a. Democrats shift the formula away from the
    South to the North and West
  • b. Republicans shift the formula away from the
    East to the South and Southwest
  • c. Result Democrats move left, Republicans right

20
  • Consequence of reforms parties represent
    different set of upper-middle-class voters
  • Republicans represent traditional middle class
  • Democrats hurt because the traditional middle
    class closer in opinions to most citizens

21
  • Minor parties
  • 4 Types of Minor parties
  • Ideological parties comprehensive, radical view
    most enduring Examples Socialist, Communist,
    Libertarian

B. Single-issue parties address one concern,
avoid others Examples Free Soil, Know-Nothing,
Prohibition
22
  • C. Economic protest parties regional, appear
    during depressions and panics. Examples
    Greenbacks, Populists
  • D. Splinter parties from split in a major party
    Examples Bull Moose, Henry Wallace, American
    Independent, Reform

23
Nominating a president
  • Two contrary forces party's desire to win
    motivates it to seek an appealing candidate, but
    its desire to keep dissidents in party forces a
    compromise to more extreme views
  • Are the delegates representative of the voters?
  • No. Democrats are liberals and Republicans are
    conservative

24
Presidential Primaries
  • Party elections before actual election.
  • Usually held from February to June of the
    election year
  • First state that starts it?
  • New Hampshire
  • Two types Open and Closed
  • Open, anybody can vote. Closed, only party
    members vote.
  • Raiding (opposition intruding primary)

25
  • Caucus meeting of party followers at which
    delegates are picked
  • a. Only most-dedicated partisans attend
  • b. Often choose most ideological candidate
  • Jesse Jackson in 1984
  • Pat Robertson in 1988

26
Parties versus voters
  • Formula for winning president
  • a. Nominate candidates with views closer to the
    average citizen (e.g., 1996 election)
  • b. Fight campaign over issues agreed on by
    delegates and voters (e.g., 1992 election)
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