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Political Parties

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Section 4 The Minor Parties 15. Four types of minor parties have played a role in American politics. 16. Ideological parties are based on certain social, economic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Political Parties


1
Political Parties
2
Section 1 Parties and What They Do
  • Public offices
  • The United States two major parties are the
    Republicans and the Democrats.
  • Political parties are essentials to democratic
    government.
  • Parties help link the people and their wishes to
    government action.
  • Parties also help unify the people by finding
    compromise among contending views.

3
  • 3. Political parties perform five major
    functions.
  • First, they nominate, or name, candidates to
    public office.
  • Parties present candidates to the voters and then
    gather support for them.
  • Second, parties inform the people and inspire
    them to participate in public affairs.
  • Third, political parties help ensure that their
    candidates and officeholders are qualified and of
    character.

4
  • e. Parties have some governing responsibilities.
  • f. Congress and State legislatures are organized
    along party lines.
  • g. They conduct much of their business based on
    partisanship, or firm allegiance to a political
    party.
  • h. Fifth, parties act as watchdogs over the
    conduct of government.
  • i. The party out of power keeps an especially
    close eye on the policies and behavior of the
    party in power, or the party that controls the
    executive branch of each national or State
    government.

5
Section 2 The Two-Party System
  • 4. In the United States, there is a two-party
    system, which means that the two major political
    parties dominate politics.
  • Minor parties, or those without wide support,
    also exist.
  • 5. The First two American political parties arose
    during the ratification of the Constitution
    several factors have made the two-party system
    last.
  • One basic factor is tradition the system remains
    because it has always been.

6
  • 6. Also, the electoral system favors a two-party
    system.
  • Nearly all U.S. elections are single-member
    district elections, in which voters choose only
    one candidate for each office.
  • The winner is whoever receives plurality, or the
    largest number of votes.
  • Most voters tend not to vote for minor party
    candidates, who are unlikely to win.
  • Also, much of U.S. election law created by
    Republicans and Democrats, or in a bipartisan way
    discourages minor parties.
  • Consensus helps eliminate the need for many
    parties

7
  • 7. However, alternative political systems exist
    around the world.
  • In a multiparty arrangement, several major and
    minor parties compete.
  • To gain power, a number of parties often form a
    coalition, or union of people with diverse
    interests who share power.
  • Nearly all dictatorships today have one-party
    systems, in which only one party is allowed

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9
Section 3 The Two-Party System in American
History
  • Debate over the Constitutions ratification cause
    two sides the Federalists and the
    Anti-Federalists to form.
  • a. These became the first political parties.
  • In the election of 1800, Anti-Federalist Thomas
    Jefferson beat the incumbent, that is, the
    current officeholder, Federalist President John
    Adams.
  • b. The Anti-Federalists then took control of
    politics.
  • c. They later became the Democratic-Republicans
    and then the Democrats.
  • There have been four eras during which one party
    dominated national politics.
  • From 1800 to 1860, the Democrats held power.
  • a. They were a coalition of small farmers,
    debtors, frontier pioneers, and slave holders.
  • b. By the mide-1820s, they had split into
    factions, or dissenting groups.

10
12. In 1854 the Republican Party formed. It
controlled national politics from 1860 to
1932. a. The party was supported by business and
financial interests, farmers, laborers, and newly
freed African Americans. b. By 1896, the
Republicans drew from a broad range of the
electorate people eligible to vote. c. At that
time the nations party politics began to move
toward the economic arena and away from
sectionalism, or devotion to the interests of one
region, that had plagued the nation for
years. 13. The Great Depression had a huge impact
on American life, and one change it saw was the
return to dominance of the Democrats. a. From
1932 to 1968, they operated from a strong base of
southerners, small farmers, labor union members,
and city people. 14. A new era began in 1968 with
the election of the Republican President Richard
Nixon. a. Since then, neither party has entirely
dominated politics. b. For much of that time,
while one party held the White House, the other
controlled Congress.
11
  • Section 4 The Minor Parties
  • 15. Four types of minor parties have played a
    role in American politics.
  • 16. Ideological parties are based on certain
    social, economic, or political ideas.
  • a. They do not often win elections, but they
    remain active for a long time.
  • 17. Single-issue parties focus on one public
    policy matter.
  • a. They fade away after the issue has been
    resolved or people lose interest.
  • b. Sometimes they are able to get one of the
    major parties to take on their issue.
  • 18.Economic protest parties appear during tough
    financial times.
  • a. They criticize the economic actions and plans
    of the major parties.

12
  • 19. Splinter parties - Most of the important
    minor parties in American politics parties that
    have broken away from one of the major parties.
  • a. Usually they have a stronger leader who did
    not win a major partys nomination.
  • 20. Although most Americans do not support them,
    minor parties still have an impact on politics
    and on the major parties.
  • a. The minor parties members act a critics and
    innovators, drawing attention to otherwise
    neglected or controversial issues.
  • 21. Strong third-party candidates can also play
    the spoiler role in elections.
  • a. This means that they pull away votes from one
    of the major parties, weakening that partys
    ability to win an election.

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14
  • Section 5 Party Organization
  • 22. The major parties are decentralized, or
    fragmented.
  • a. At the national level, the party machinery
    has four basic elements
  • the national convention that nominates the
    partys candidates
  • the national committee that runs the partys
    affairs between conventions
  • the national chairperson who leads the national
    committee
  • the congressional campaign committees that work
    to elect party members to Congress

15
  • 23. From the perspective of its members, a party
    has three basic and loosely connected parts.
  • The party organization consists of the party
    machinerys leaders.
  • The party in the electorate refers to those
    followers who usually vote for the partys
    candidates.
  • The party in government describes the partys
    officeholders

16
  • 24. At the State and local levels, State law
    largely sets party structure.
  • At the State level, a chairperson heads a central
    committee.
  • b. Local party structure varies widely, with a
    party unit for each district in which elections
    are held.
  • c. The districts include congressional and
    legislative districts, counties, cities, and
    towns, wards, and precincts.
  • d. A ward is a small unit of a city a precinct
    is a subdivision of a ward.

17
  • 25. Political parties have been in decline since
    the 1960s.
  • a. More and more voters regard themselves as
    independents.
  • b. Also, split-ticket voting, or voting for
    candidates of different parties in the same
    election, has increased.

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