1 / 21

Chapter 5 Political Parties

Chapter 5 Political Parties. Section 1—Parties and What They Do. What is a political party? Some are “issue” or “principle” oriented Some are oriented toward winning elections. What Do Parties Do? They are the medium for presenting opinions to the people.

stacie
Download Presentation

Chapter 5 Political Parties

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 5Political Parties

  2. Section 1—Parties and What They Do • What is a political party? • Some are “issue” or “principle” oriented • Some are oriented toward winning elections. • What Do Parties Do? • They are the medium for presenting opinions to the people. • They are a link between the governed and those who govern. • They work to blunt conflicts—Power Brokers

  3. Section 1—Parties and What They Do • What Do Parties Do? (cont.) • Nominating Candidates (recruiting and choosing) • Informing and Activating Supporters • The Bonding Agent Function (screening) • Governing—”partisanship” • Acting as Watchdog • “ins and “outs” • Loyal Opposition

  4. Section 2—The Two-Party System

  5. Section 2—The Two-Party System • Earl Dodge: six time presidential candidate • Why a Two-Party System? • Regional one-party presence at times • The Historical Basis • Federalists and anti-federalists • Hamilton vs. Jefferson • Washington: warned against “the baneful effects of the spirit of party.”

  6. Section 2—The Two-Party System • Why a Two-Party System? (cont.) • The Force of Tradition • Long acceptance “that is just the way it is.” • The Electoral System • Single-member districts • Plurality—largest number of votes cast • Bipartisan nature discourages minor parties • Non-major party candidates in only 7 elections

  7. Section 2—The Two-Party System • Why a Two-Party System (cont.) • The American Ideological Consensus • Pluralistic Society—many cultures and groups • Consensus—on most fundamental matters • Middle-of-the-road tendency

  8. Section 2—The Two-Party System • Multiparty Systems • Many European nations • Must build coalitions • One-Party Systems • Really no-party • 1/3 of the States are mostly one-party

  9. Section 2—The Two-Party System • Party Membership Patterns • Cross section • Democrats—African Americans, Catholics, Jews, Union members, etc. • Republicans—white males, Protestants, business community, etc. • Disrupting events can change patterns: • Civil War • Great Depression

  10. Section 3—The Two-Party System in American History • The Nation’s First Parties • Federalist—Alexander Hamilton • Anti-Federalists under Thomas Jefferson. Became Jeffersonian Republicans; later Democratic Republicans; and then Democrats. • Jefferson defeated the incumbent Adams in 1800.

  11. Section 3—The Two-Party System in American History • American Parties: Four Major Eras • The Era of the Democrats, 1800-1860 • Federalists disappear by 1816 • Era of Good Feelings • Split into factions • National Republican party (Whigs) emerges • Whigs fall apart • Democrats split into North and South • 1856 the Republicans emerge from previous Whigs and some Democrats.

  12. Section 3—The Two-Party System in American History • American Parties: Four Major Eras • The Era of the Republicans, 1860-1932 • Democrats held the “Solid South.” • McKinley’s victory in 1896 solidified party • Only interruptions were Cleveland and Wilson

  13. Section 3—The Two-Party System in American History • American Parties: Four Major Eras • The Return of the Democrats, 1932-1968 • Great Depression/Roosevelt • Social Welfare programs/New Deal • The Start of a New Era, 1968-2005 • Divided government

  14. Section 4—The Minor Parties • Minor Parties in the United States • Ideological Parties • Socialist, Socialist Labor, Socialist Worker, and Communist. • Libertarian • Single Issue Parties • Free Soil—opposed slavery • American or Know Nothing Party—opposed Irish immigration. • Right to Life Party—opposes abortion

  15. Section 4—The Minor Parties • Minor Parties in the United States • Economic Protest Parties • Greenback Party • Populist Party of the 1890s • Splinter Parties • Bull Moose Party of 1912 • LaFollette’s Progressive Party • States’ Rights (Dixiecrats) • American Independent Party of George Wallace • Green Party with Ralph Nader

  16. Section 4—The Minor Parties • Why Minor Parties Are Important • Anti Masonic Party had first convention in 1831. • Spoiler role of Teddy Roosevelt, Ralph Nader and Ross Perot • They highlight important issues • Income tax, women’s rights, voting

  17. Section 5—Party Organization • The Decentralized Nature of the Parties. • The Role of the Presidency • The Impact of Federalism • Over 500,000 elective offices in America • The Role of the Nominating Process

  18. Section 5—Party Organization • National Party Machinery • The National Convention • The National Committee • The National Chairperson • The Congressional Campaign Committees

  19. Section 5—Party Organization • State and Local Party Machinery • The State Organization • Local Organization • Wards • Precinct

  20. Section 5—Party Organization • The Three Components of the Party • The party organization-leaders, activists, contributors, hanger’s on • The party in the electorate-loyal voters • The party in government-officeholders

  21. Section 5—Party Organization • The Future of the Major Parties • Decline in party “identification.” • Increase in split-ticket voting • Open reforms have led to internal conflict and disorganization. • Changes in technology • Growth of single-issue organizations

More Related