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CHAPTER 5: The American Political System. Political Parties 1.Definition : a group of people who have similar beliefs about how a government should be.

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Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 5: The American Political System. Political Parties 1.Definition : a group of people who have similar beliefs about how a government should be."— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 5: The American Political System

2 Political Parties 1.Definition : a group of people who have similar beliefs about how a government should be run 2. Goals : Organize a political majority Provide electable candidates Educate voters on campaign platforms Finance campaigns Win/Run the government

3 3. Fears Concerning: Bickering/fighting over partisan issues rather than working together to make the country better Washington’s warning: “It agitates the Community with ill founded jealousies and false alarms, kindles the animosity of one part against another…” Party officials would use their political power for personal gain

4 4. Advantages of the two-party system : 1)Stability of a two-party system compared to a multi- party system 2)National election laws favor a two-party system 3)Size of the United States doesn’t allow a third-party or minority party to achieve national success; a major party will add a plank(s) to its platform when necessary 4)Tradition of taking turns or alternation: Voters have short memories so one party doesn’t stay in power for long.

5 5. Historical Development of the Two-Party System 1)Began to form during the campaign to ratify the Constitution (1787-1789). People sided with either Alexander Hamilton/John Adams and the Federalists or Thomas Jefferson/James Madison and the Anti-Federalists. 2)During the first years of the new federal government (1789- 1800), the Anti-Federalists became a true political party--- the Democratic-Republican party 3)In 1800, for the first time, the D-Rs actively recruited members (both voters and candidates) and forged alliances with politicians in every state. D-Rs win the presidential election of 1800 (Thomas Jefferson) Nine of the next 13 presidents are D-Rs or Democrats

6 First Political Parties Federalists (Alexander Hamilton) Democratic-Republicans (Thomas Jefferson) Emphasis on manufacturing, shipping, trading Emphasis on agriculture (farming) Strong central governmentStrong state governments Loose interpretation of Constitution Strict interpretation of Constitution Pro-BritishPro-French Favored a National BankOpposed a National Bank Favored protective tariffsOpposed protective tariffs Wealthy and well-educated should lead the nation All types of people should have political power

7 Time-Line Exercise to Illustrate the Development of American Political Parties

8 Political Labels Exercise

9 6. Organization of Political Parties 1)National Committee (reps. from each state): Plans national convention every four years Raises money for political activities Writes the party platform Runs the presidential election campaign 2)State Central Committee (powerful; meets year-round): Select members of national committee Supervises party activities, selection of candidates, patronage Raises money Coordinates county committees 3) County Committee: supervises/directs party workers; influences contracts/job hiring through political machines 4)Precinct Organization: party unity at the town or neighborhood level---also known as wards; local or “grass roots” workers (ex. of McCarthy’s ”kids”) are vital

10 7. State/National Party Conventions (every four years) 1)Purpose: nominate candidates, create party platforms, vote on rules for operation of party 1)Replaces old party caucus---more democratic 1)Delegates elected through primaries or nominating conventions Not required to vote for a particular candidate May be influenced by powerful political leaders 4)Early business: Credentials and Platform committees settle any disputes. 5)Balloting: Nominations for President, then a roll call of state votes, which continues until one nominee earns a majority.

11 8. Steps in the Presidential Election Cycle 1)Candidate Announcement – A year or more in advance 2)Nominating Conventions & Primary Elections – Spring of election year 3)National Convention - Summer 4)The Campaign – Fall (traditionally begins Labor Day) 5)Election Day – first Tuesday after the first Monday in November If not re-elected, outgoing President enters lame- duck period 6)Inauguration – January of the following year


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