Political Parties

Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 31

Political Parties: Essential To Democracy

Political parties have existed since the first


decade of the new governments existence.
Americans have always had ambivalent feelings
about them.
Parties are necessary, and they perform vital
functions. But they have always been
complicated, full of internal conflict,
disorganized and decentralized, rigid but
capable of being taken over by reformers.
Parties often mirror American society and are
deeply rooted in the democratic process.

What Parties Do for Democracy


Party Functions

Organize the Competition


Unify the Electorate
Inspire and Inform Voters
Translate Preferences into Policy
Provide Loyal Opposition
Organize Government
Help Govern
Act as Watchdogs
Nominate Candidates
Ensure Candidate Quality

Party Systems Multiparty and Two Party System


Minor Parties: Persistence and Frustration

Party Systems
Multiparty
Coalition government
is necessary

Two party
Winner-takes-all
system

Minor parties have an Wasted vote


incentive to persevere
syndrome
discourages minor
Proportional
parties
representation
Government tends
Governments tend
toward stability
toward instability
Policy change is
incremental

The U.S. is a two-party system; most other


democracies have a multiparty system

Party Systems
Although the United States has many minor parties, only the
two major parties have much of a chance to win elections.
Multiparty systems are almost always found in countries that
have a parliamentary government, in contrast to our
presidential system.

Barriers to Minor-Party Success

History
Tradition
Consensus

Minor Parties: Persistence and Frustration


Ideological Parties
Protest Parties
Single Issue Parties
Splinter Parties

Libertarian Party
Green Party
Reform Party

The purpose of Political Parties is to


a. recruit potential officeholders
b. simplify alternatives
c. unite the electorate
d. all of the above

Which of the following is not a presentday function of Political Parties


a. distribution of welfare handouts
b. stimulation of interest in public affairs
c. recruitment of political leadership
d. linkage between the mass public and
government

A Brief History of American Political Parties


Our First Parties
Political parties emerged largely out of practical necessity.
Federalists and Anti-Federalists
In 1787, parties began to form as citizens debated the
ratification of the U.S. Constitution.

Realigning Elections
1824 Andrew Jackson and the Democrats
1860 The Civil War and the Rise of the Republicans
1896 A Party in Transition
1932 FDR and the New Deal Alignment

Divided Government
The 2008 Election: Witnessing History

American Party
History
Federalist Party
Anti-Mason Party
Two minor anti-slavery
parties in the 1840s:
Liberty Party
Free-soil party
Greenback Party
Peoples Party
American Socialist Party
Socialist Labor Party

The Last Half Century


Major shifts in party demographics have occurred in
recent decades.
Since 1953, divided government, with one party
controlling Congress and the other the White House, has
been in effect twice as long as united government.
Elections during the past few decades have seen power
change hands numerous times without any long-term
shifts in the population in party allegiance.
CONTROL OVER NATIONAL POLITICS HAS
GONE BACK AND FORTH BETWEEN THE
PARTIES SINCE
THEIR
BEGINNING
1789 1800
1860
1932
1968
AntiFederalist
Federalist;
Democrats

Republicans
Dem R D R D R D R D

20

Minor Parties in the United States


Year

1832
1856
1860
1860
1892
1912
1912
1924

Party

Anti-Masonic
American
Democratic
(Secessionist)
Constitutional Union
Peoples (Populist)
Bull Moose
(Progressive)
Socialist
Progressive

Presidential
Candidate

Percent
Popular
Vote

Electoral
Votes
Received

William Wirt
8%
Milliard Fillmore
22
John C. Breckenridge 18

7
8
72

John Bell
13
James B. Weaver
9
Theodore Roosevelt 27

79
22
88

Eugene V. Debs
6
Robert M. LaFollette 17

0
13

Minor Parties in the United States


Year
1948
1948
1968
1980
1992
1996

Party
States Rights
(Dixiecrat)
Progressive
American
Independent
National Unity
Reform
Reform

2000 Green
2000
2008

Reform
Independent
Reform

Presidential
Candidate

Percent
Popular
Vote
Strom Thurmond
2%

Electoral
Votes
Received
39

Henry A. Wallace
George C. Wallace

2
14

0
46

John Anderson
Ross Perot
Ross Perot

7
19
8

0
0
0

Ralph Nader

Pat Buchanan
Ralph Nader
Ralph Nader

0
0
#

0
0
0
#

American Parties Today


Parties as Institutions
National Party Leadership
Party Platforms
Parties at the State and Local
Levels
Parties in Government

In the Legislative Branch


In the Executive Branch
In the Judicial Branch
At the State and Local Levels

American Parties Today


Party Platforms

American Parties Today (continue)


Parties in the Electorate
Party Registration
When voters register to vote
in the states, they are asked to
state their party preference.

Party Activists
People who invest time and
effort in political parties

Party Identification
Partisanship is what political
scientists

Partisan Dealignment?

Party Identification

Why do you
suppose 1/3 to
40% of the
electorate
considers
themselves
non-partisan?

Group Voting Patterns

Party Identification, 1950 2000s

Are the Political Parties Dying?

Are the Political Parties Dying?


Critics of the U.S. party system make three
allegations against it.
(1) parties do not take meaningful and contrasting positions
on most issues,
(2) party membership is essentially meaningless, and
(3) parties are so concerned with accommodating the middle
of the ideological spectrum that they are incapable of serving
as an avenue for social progress.

Some analysts fear that parties are in severe decline


or even mortally ill.
Legislation limiting the viability and functions of
parties was bad enough, say the party pessimists, but
parties suffer from additional problems.

Are the Political Parties Dying?


Reform Among the Democrats
Agreed to a number of reforms, responding to the disarray
and to disputes about the fairness of delegate selection
procedures
Established a process that led to greater use of direct
primaries for the selection of delegates to the national
convention and greater representation of younger voters,
women, and minorities as elected delegates.
Abolition of the winner-take-all rule (the unit rule) that gave
all delegates to the primary or convention winner.

Reform Among the Republicans


Republicans did not make changes as drastic as those made
by Democrats
Did give the national committee more control over
presidential campaigns

Are Political Parties Dying?


Continued Importance of Parties
Political parties are vital to the functioning of
democracy, organizing electoral competition, unify large
portions of the electorate, simplify democracy for voters,
help transform individual preferences into policy, and
provide a mechanism for opposition.
Parties are just as important in organizing the
government, straddling the separation of powers as fellow
partisans cooperate between the executive and legislative
branches or between the House and Senate.
Parties provide an important way for citizens to
influence government.

How Parties Raise and Spend Money


How Parties Raise and Spend Money
Political parties rely on contributions from
individuals and interest groups to fund their activities.
Because of the close connection, political parties have
with office holders, the courts have long permitted
regulation of the source and amount of money people
and groups can contribute to parties, as well as the
amount parties can spend with or contribute to
candidates.

Effects of the 2002 Campaign Finance Reforms (BCRA)

How Parties Raise and Spend Money


Party Expenditures
Party committees are
permitted to make
contributions to candidates
and can spend a limited
amount of money in what
are called coordinated
expenditures.
Compared to other
countries, the U.S. has less
public funding of political
parties and candidates.

Which of these is NOT a characteristic


of a realigning election?
a. Weak voter involvement
b. Disruptions of traditional voting patterns
c. Changes in the relationships of power
within the broader political community
d. The formation of new and durable
electoral groupings

A major cause for the persistence of the


two-party system in the United States is
that
a. the major parties have become disciplined
and issue-oriented.
b. election districts have a single incumbent.
c. third parties have failed to point out
issues.
d. major party ideas and platform are too
much like religious dogma.

The _____ party evolved out of the


crisis over slavery.
a. Whig
b. Democratic
c. Modern Republican
d. Second Federalist

The _____ party put together a grand


coalition lasting from the Civil War
until 1932.
a. Whig
b. Democratic
c. Republican
d. Bull Moose

Third-party leaders have included all of


the following except
a. Ralph Nader
b. Ross Perot
c. George Wallace
d. California Governor Jerry Brown

When a voter must be registered in a


party to vote in the primary, it is called
a. closed
b. open
c. direct
d. crossover

After passage of the BCRA, ________.


a. Political parties were weakened because of
limits on funding
b. There was a surge in individual contributions
resulting in a strengthening of political parties
c. There was no change in contributions
d. There was a short weakening of contributions
followed by a modest increase

You might also like