chapter eight: political parties 1. learning objectives distinguish between a political party, an...

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Chapter Eight: Politic al Parties 1

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Page 1: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Chapter Eight:

Political Parties

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Page 2: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Learning Objectives

Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction.

Identify the primary functions of a political party.

Identify and explain the significance of the distinct eras of political party development.

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Page 3: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Learning Objectives

Explain the transformation of the Democratic Party from a party of limited government, states’ rights, and racism to a party of strong government, national authority, and support for civil rights.

Describe the core constituents and economic beliefs of the Republican and Democratic parties today.

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Page 4: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Learning Objectives

Explain how economic politics and cultural politics often pull individual voters in different directions.

Explain the three faces of a political party: the party organization, the party in electorate, and the party-in-government.

Explain how the winner-take-all election system works against third parties.

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Page 5: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Learning Objectives

Compare and contrast ideological third parties and splinter parties.

Explain what partisan realignment is and identify the four most important realignments in American history.

Briefly explain the rise of independent voters and split-ticket voting.

Define the concept of demographically based political tipping and give one contemporary example.

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Page 6: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

What Is a Political Party?

A political party is a group of political activists who organize to win elections, operate the government, and determine public policy.

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Page 7: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

What Is a Political Party?

Political parties differ from interest groups:

do not want to operate the government.do not put forth political candidates.interest groups tend to sharpen issues, while

political parties tend to blur their issue positions to attract voters.

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Page 8: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

What Is a Political Party?

Functions of Political Parties Recruit candidates for public office Organize and run elections Present alternative policies to voters Accept responsibility for operating government Act as organized opposition to party in power

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Page 9: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

A History of Political Parties in the United States

The Formative Years: Federalists and Anti-Federalists

The Era of Good FeelingsNational Two-Party Rule:

Whigs and Democrats

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Page 10: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

A History of Political Parties in the United States

The Civil War Crisis

The Post-Civil War Period“Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion”The Triumph of the Republicans

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Page 11: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

A History of Political Parties in the United States

The Progressive InterludeThe New Deal Era

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Page 12: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

A History of Political Parties in the United States

An Era of Divided Government:

From 1968–2010, the general pattern was often a Republican president and a Democratic Congress.

2000 Presidential Election (Red state–blue state)

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Page 13: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Two Major U.S. Parties Today

Economic beliefs:

Democrats are associated with improving the environment, education, energy problems, and health care.

Republicans are associated with dealing with terrorism, and solving the budget deficit.

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Page 14: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Two Major U.S. Parties Today14

Page 15: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Two Major U.S. Parties Today15

Page 16: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Two Major U.S. Parties Today

Cultural Politics and Socioeconomic status: lower income people tend to be socially conservative.

The Regional Factor in Cultural Politics: wealthier regions tend to support Democrats.

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Page 17: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Three Faces of a Party

Party-in-the-Electorate

Party Organization

Party-in-Government

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Page 18: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Three Faces of a Party

Party Organization

National Party Organization: National Convention and Delegates National Committee National Chairperson

State Party Organization

Local Party Organization

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Page 19: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Three Faces of a Party19

Page 20: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Three Faces of a Party20

Page 21: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Three Faces of a Party

Party-in-Government Divided Government

The Limits of Party Unity

Party Polarization

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Page 22: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Why Has the Two-Party System Endured?

Historical foundations of the systemPolitical socialization and practical

considerationsThe winner-take-all electoral systemState and federal laws favoring the two-party

system.

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Page 23: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Role of Minor Parties in U.S. Politics

Ideological Third Parties

Splinter Parties

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Page 24: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Role of Minor Parties in U.S. Politics24

Page 25: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Role of Minor Parties in U.S. Politics25

Page 26: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

The Role of Minor Parties in U.S. Politics

Impact of Minor Parties

Influence the Major Parties

Affect the Outcome of an Election

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Page 27: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Mechanisms of Political Change

Realignment: major constituencies shift their allegiance from one party to another.

Dealignment: increase in independent voters.

Tipping: a group becomes more numerous over time and changes the political balance.

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Page 28: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Mechanisms of Political Change28

Page 29: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Web Links

Democratic Party: www.democrats.org Republican National Committee: www.rnc

.orgLibertarian Party: www.lp.orgGreen Party of the United States: www.gp

.orgPolitics1.com Offers information on major

U.S. parties and 50 minor parties: www.politics1.com/parties.htm

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Page 30: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

What If…Parties Were Supported Solely by Public Funding?

Today’s major political parties are supported by hundreds of millions of dollars offered by unions, corporations, other groups, and individuals.

If funding was reduced, it would reduce the effectiveness of political parties.

Individuals, corporations, and interest groups could not contribute.

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Page 31: Chapter Eight: Political Parties 1. Learning Objectives Distinguish between a political party, an interest group, and a faction. Identify the primary

Possible effects:

Could reduce lobbyingCould lead to the growth of nonparty

organizationsCould increase candidate fundraising.Could lead to new, smaller political parties

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What If…Parties Were Supported Solely by Public Funding?