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Are you a party member, or a party identifier?  Members actively participate  Identifiers don’t.

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Presentation on theme: "Are you a party member, or a party identifier?  Members actively participate  Identifiers don’t."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Are you a party member, or a party identifier?  Members actively participate  Identifiers don’t

3 Did you say party?  Political Party: Group of people outside the government that try to win elections so that they can operate government.  Determine public policy

4 Founding Fathers Were Lame Party Poopers Founding fathers believed that the best, most qualified person would be chosen. Parties were considered quarreling factions*

5 Quick History  Started with the Federalists and Anti-Federalists. (Not yet considered real parties)  Anti-Federalists became the Democratic Republicans under Thomas Jefferson  Federalists die off.  Democratic Republicans split and become Democrats and National Republican Party (Whigs)  Whigs die. Democrats split because of the war and become today’s parties (absorb the Whigs)

6 Parties are 3-D! Super Neato  The Party in the Electorate: Voters  The Party Organization: Local, State, National offices. Raise money, candidates, promotion  The Party in Government: Candidates who have won positions in government. (Unique because only linkage institution that is held accountable)

7 What do Parties do?  Select Candidates  Inform Public  Coordinate Policymaking  Balance Competing Interests  Parties are coalitions  Find compromise  Run Campaigns  Raise Money for Candidates

8 Two is Company, Three is a Crowd  Two party system: Republican and Democrats  There are actually other parties (i.e. Green), but they do not receive the attention (media) that the major parties receive. (Does the media influence opinion once again?)

9 Why do third parties jog and lose?  Consensus: Most Americans are moderate. We also usually want the same goal, just different means to achieve it.  Tradition: Remember the ol’ Federalists and Anti-Federalists. That is where it all began. (Founding fathers actually despised parties)  Funding: Raising $ is hard, they can be partially repaid if 5% of votes are gathered

10 Why Jogging Cont.  Elective Process:  Single-member district system- candidate only needs a plurality of votes to win (most votes, not a majority)  First Past the Post (FPTP)-compared to France’s two rounds run off voting  Keeps third parties from running or gaining influence. (Compared to Proportional Representation- PR and 2 nd Ballot votes)

11 They are out there, waiting, quietly.  Third parties exist such as the Socialist Labor Party (1891) and Social Democrats (1901), Boston Tea Party, Pot Party ("A movement to pretty much legalize marijuana.")  Impact of third parties: Reforms such as minimum wage, woman’s suffrage, retirement pensions.  Influence election outcomes  Offer alternative for people frustrated w/ two parties.

12 Why they are formed?  Issue oriented parties: Run based mostly on single issue (Green Party)  Ideological Parties: Libertarian Party, American Nazi Party (Lincoln Rockwell)  Splinter Parties: Bull Moose (Progressive Party)

13 Closer to Home  State Organizations: Usually only work with national organization during major elections  Local: Consists of different districts, counties, cities, etc.

14 The Big Time  National Convention: Summer before presidential election, write party platform, choose candidates  National Committee: States select members to the committee who plan between conventions.  National Chairperson: Head of the committee  Congressional Campaign Committee: Help congressional members get reelected. (Why is it important?)


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