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Unit 3 Table of Content

Unit 3 Table of Content. POLITICAL SPECTRUM. An Introduction. POLITICAL IDEOLOGY. A political ideology is a set of basic beliefs about life, culture, government, and society that is used as a framework for evaluating public policy and government action. POLITICAL IDEOLOGY.

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Unit 3 Table of Content

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  1. Unit 3 Table of Content

  2. POLITICAL SPECTRUM An Introduction

  3. POLITICAL IDEOLOGY A political ideology is a set of basic beliefs about life, culture, government, and society that is used as a framework for evaluating public policy and government action.

  4. POLITICAL IDEOLOGY A person’s political ideology is influenced by a variety of factors including: -family -race/ethnicity -education -gender/orientation -religious beliefs -regional location -socio-economic status

  5. POLITICAL SPECTRUM A political spectrum is a tool used to visually compare different political positions by placing the positions on one or more axes.

  6. LEFT CENTER RIGHT In the U.S., the most commonly used political spectrum, (also known as the political continuum), places a range of beliefs along a horizontal line and is described in terms left or right of center.

  7. Most commonly, the Political Spectrum tells us two things: 1) How much change in gov’t a person is willing to allow (and how fast that change should take place) 2) How much the gov’t should intervene, or get involved, in the lives of people (particularly with respect to the economy)

  8. LEFT More government intervention Gradual to rapid change in government RIGHT Less government intervention Little to no change in status quo (how things are) GENERAL ASSUMPTIONS

  9. LEFT used to describe people who support change in society and government intervention RIGHT refers to people who hold traditional values and want less government intervention QUICK RECAP:

  10. POLITICAL SPECTRUM OF IDEOLOGIES LEFT RIGHT LIBERAL CONSERVATIVE RADICAL MODERATE REACT.

  11. RADICAL • Far left of the political spectrum • Call for wide-sweeping,rapid change in the basic structure of the political, social, or economic system. • May be willing to resort to extreme methods to bring about change, including the use of violence and revolution.

  12. LIBERAL • Government should be actively involved in the promotion of social welfare of a nation’s citizens. • Call for peaceful, gradual change within the existing political system. • Reject violent revolution as a way of changing the way things are

  13. MODERATE • May share viewpoints with both liberals and conservatives • Tolerant of other people’s views • Do not hold extreme views • Advocate a “go-slow” or “wait- and-see” approach to social or political change

  14. CONSERVATIVE • Favor keeping things the way they are, or maintaining the status quo • Usually hesitant or cautious about adopting new policies, especially if they involve government activism. • They feel that the less government there is, the better.

  15. REACTIONARY • Far right of ideological spectrum • Want to go back to the way things were—the “good ol’ days” • Often willing to use extreme methods, such as repressive use of government power, to achieve their goals

  16. THE POLITICAL SPECTRUM APPLIED Rex Tugwell, an advisor to president FDR, said that different attitudes toward change characterize a holding to to different political philosophies. He wrote that if a community needed a new train station, or education reform, crime control, etc…

  17. RADICALSwould prefer to blow up the train station and forgo service until the new structure is built. • LIBERALSwould like to rebuild the train station while the train is running. • CONSERVATIVESwould prefer to keep the old station, being satisfied with it. • REACTIONARIESwould abandon the station entirely since they don’t approve of trains in the first place.

  18. SPECTRUMS AND PARTIES Political parties are loosely formed around these broad political ideologies.

  19. DEMOCRATS generally seen as liberal because they support government regulation of the economy REPUBLICANS generally seen as conservative because they advocate a reduction in government TWO MAJOR U.S. PARTIES

  20. MORE SPECIFICALLY… • Within parties, there are people who hold a variety of opinions on social and economic issues that fall along the spectrum of political ideologies • Examples are liberal Democrats, moderate Democrats, moderate Republicans, and conservative Republicans

  21. REPUBLICANS DEMOCRATS BOTH PARTIES LEAN TOWARD MODERATE Current theorists say that U.S. political parties are becoming increasingly moderate and therefore less easily separated on the political spectrum

  22. Communists? Socialists? Fascists? Absolutists? WHERE WOULD YOU PUT… LEFT RIGHT CONSERVATIVE FASCIST SOCIALIST LIBERAL CENTRISTS ABSO REACT. COMMUNIST RADICAL

  23. LEFT Pro Gun Control Pro-Choice (Abortion) No Censorship Prisons should Rehabilitate Pro-Privacy Equal Funding for Education Democratic Party Platform RIGHT Anti-Gun Control Pro-Life (Abortion) Anti-Flag Burning Prisons Should Punish Prayer in Schools School Vouchers Republican Party Platform CURRENT ISSUES

  24. RADICAL MODERATE REACTIONARY 500 400 300 200 100 LIBERAL LIBERAL CONSERVATIVE CONSERV. LIBERAL CONSERVATIVE SURVEY RESULTS • Reflect on your results! • Where did you fall? • Was this accurate?

  25. MATCH WHERE YOU FALL WITH THE FOLLOWING POLITICAL FIGURES Ronald Reagan Jesse Jackson Ted Kennedy Hillary Clinton Bill Clinton George Bush Jack Kemp Bob Dole Colin Powell 100% LIBERAL 100% CONSERVATIVE

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