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Chapter 4

Chapter 4. Political Ideologies. Introduction. Political ideology is an integrated set of political ideas about what constitutes the most equitable and just political order . American Political Ideologies

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Chapter 4

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  1. Chapter 4 Political Ideologies

  2. Introduction • Political ideology is an integrated set of political ideas about what constitutes the most equitable and just political order. • American Political Ideologies • Most Americans identify with mainstream ideologies (liberal or conservative) that do not challenge the existing political order. • Radical ideologies (democratic socialism and libertarianism) challenge much of the existing social and political order. • Exotic as they may seem, however, socialism and libertarianism still operate within the democratic framework.

  3. Liberalism • Introduction • Liberalism assumes that individuals are rational and capable of overcoming obstacles without resorting to violence. • John Locke’s contract theory of the state declares that the state gains its legitimacy from the people and is required to protect life, liberty, and property. • Classical liberalism: Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson • Nineteenth century classical liberalism believed that the government that governed least governed best. • Jefferson and Jackson believed that a strong central government would promote a “moneyed aristocracy dangerous to the liberties of the country.”

  4. Key Ideas of American Ideologies Different forms of liberalism and conservatism have defined much of the ideological debate in American politics; other ideologies challenged and influenced mainstream ideas.

  5. Populism and Progressivism: The Repudiation of Classical Liberalism • Populism called for further democratization of government and strengthening government’s role in the economy. • Progressivism (especially as envisioned by Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson) supported government programs to ease the problems of industrialization, such as worker’s compensation and the regulation of corporations and banks.

  6. Contemporary Liberalism: The Welfare State and Beyond • Roosevelt’s New Deal reflected a change in the constituency of liberalism. New Deal liberals believed that government should ensure the economic well being of the nation and provide basic material guarantees. • Liberals today believe that government must protect individuals from the inequities of modern society and that strong government enhances individual freedom. • Liberals see government as correcting the injustices of capitalism, not supplanting it. • A benevolent government offers services to both the disadvantaged (unemployment insurance) and the middle class (Social Security), as was true during Johnson’s Great Society.

  7. Contemporary Liberalism: The Welfare State and Beyond (continued) • In the 1980s, many liberals favored an industrial policy involving government, labor, and public interest groups. • Liberals extend broad tolerance to different lifestyles and favor limiting government interference in individual rights. • Liberals tend to be members of the Democratic Party because of their support for a wide range of liberal welfare programs. • Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) is the most prominent liberal pressure group.

  8. Milestones in American Liberalism

  9. Neoliberalism: Adjusting Liberalism to the Twenty-first Century • In recent decades, liberalism shifted its focus somewhat from economic issues to social and foreign policy issues, prompting the term “neoliberalism,”neo- meaning “new.” • This shift caused neoliberals to lose support from certain groups and hindered their ability to capture the presidency. • Neoliberals call for a shift in the emphasis of liberalism form the redistribution of wealth to the promotion of wealth. • Neoliberals direct their attention not to the expansion of government services but to their effective delivery, criticizing the size and cost of bureaucracy and calling for reform of entitlement spending programs such as Social Security. Neoliberals also criticize military retirement benefits for being more generous than those in the private sector. • Traditional liberals criticize neoliberal emphasis on government efficiency and call for a return to populist ideas.

  10. A Guide to Contemporary Political Ideas and Leaders American ideologies are expressed through a variety of journals, writers, and political leaders.

  11. Conservatism • Introduction • Conservatism emphasizes the value of tradition and established practices as guides for the future. • Edmund Burke (1729 – 1797) wrote the first major statement of conservative principle: • The experience of past generations was the most reliable guide to good government. • A natural inequality among men meant that a ruling class of ability and property must control government. • Early American Conservatism: John Adams • Adams believed in sanctity of private property, but did not associate property with an aristocracy. • Adams favored a balanced government (as in the Constitution) to promote public virtue and curb private greed. • Conservatives favored limiting suffrage to men with property.

  12. Conservatism and the Industrial Age: Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner • As America industrialized, conservatives no longer supported government’s role in the economy but embraced laissez-faire economics. • Spencer and Sumner established the theory of social Darwinism, which stated that people should compete for survival so that superior individuals would win and better humanity. • Conservatism became the ideology of the business class with emphasis on the individual and the limitation of government.

  13. Contemporary Conservatism: A Response to the Welfare State • From 1933 – 1981, conservatism was measured more by what it was against than what it was for. • By the 1980s, conservatism had established its own agenda. However, at its core was still a defense of economic individualism against the growth of the welfare state. • Contemporary conservatives accept civil rights, but oppose quotas and affirmative action. • Contemporary conservatives believe the state must promote virtue and social responsibility, and improve the moral climate of society. • Conservatism has gone from being an elitist philosophy of the propertied class to a populist cause of the working and middle classes. • Most conservatives belong to the Republican Party.

  14. Neoconservatism in the Twenty-first Century • The neoconservative party largely consists of disenchanted liberals who believe that the welfare state has become an intrusive paternalistic state. • Neoconservatives oppose quotas and busing, which cause class polarization, as well as higher taxes on the upper middle class, which emphasize economic redistribution over growth. • Neoconservatives support a modest welfare state with lower taxes on large incomes and less regulation to promote growth. • Neoconservatives have pushed for an empowerment agenda to assist the poor that emphasizes anti-bureaucratic, market-oriented programs.

  15. Milestones in American Conservatism

  16. Ideological Challenges to the Status Quo • Democratic Socialism: A Radical Challenge to American Capitalism • Democratic socialism is an economic system in which the basic industries, banks, agricultural systems, and communication networks are owned by the government. • Democratic socialists advocate the adoption of socialism through peaceful, democratic means. • The central ideals of democratic socialism include the following: • Government ownership of key infrastructure • Limits on wealth and property • A universal welfare system • And government regulation of the economy.

  17. Ideological Challenges to the Status Quo (continued) • Eugene Debs led the pre-New Deal Socialist Party, which was later succeeded by the Democratic Socialists of America. • Post-New Deal socialists favor guaranteed full employment, a public works program to rebuild America’s infrastructure, and worker or community-owned businesses and factories. • Socialism has received very little public support in the United States and works to influence, rather than control, politics.

  18. Ideological Challenges to the Status Quo (continued) • Libertarianism: A Revival of Classical Liberalism • Libertarianism believes that the state must be kept small—with the essential role of government limited to the protection of human rights. • Libertarians oppose the interference of government in private lives, whether to regulate moral or economic life. • Libertarians favor nonintervention in the affairs of other nations. • The Libertarian Party and its ideas has influenced both the Republican and Democratic parties.

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