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Section 4 The Minor parties
CHAPTER 5 Section 4 The Minor parties
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The Minor Parties Objectives: * Identify the types of third parties that have been active in American politics. * Evaluate the role of third parties in the United States
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The Minor Parties America First Party National Socialist Movement
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The Minor Parties *Libertarian, Reform, Socialist, Prohibition, Natural Law, Communist, American Independent, Green Constitution, and etc. * These are some of the many parties that fielded presidential candidates for 2000 election. * None of these parties and their candidates have much of a chance of winning the election. * The bright light created by the two major parties too often blinds us to the vital role of several minor parties have played in US history.
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The Minor Parties Types of Third Parties * Their number and variety make minor parties difficult to describe and classify * Some have limited their efforts to a particular locale, other to a single State, and some to one region of the country. * Others have tried to wooo the nation * Most have been short-lived * There are four distinct types of minor parties
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The Minor Parties Ideological parties –
> those based on a particular set of beliefs > social, economic, and political matters > Most are built on some shade of Marxist thought >Socialist Party > Socialist Labor Party > Socialist Worker Party > Communist Party
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The Minor Parties 2) Single-issue Parties
> concentrate on only one public-policy matter > their names have usually indicated their primary concern > Free Soil Party (opposed Slavery) >American Party (opposed Irish-Catholic immigration) >Prohibition Party (oppose alcohol and drinking)
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The Minor Parties 3) Economic Protest Parties > rooted in periods of economic discontent > they do not have any clear-cut ideological base > they have proclaimed their disgust with the major parties and demanded better times > most often are sectional parties > The Greenback Party (take advantage of agrarian discontent from 1876 to 1884) > Populist Party (demanded public ownership of the railroads, telegraph companies, lower tariffs) > each party disappeared when country climbed out of the difficult economic times
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The Minor Parties 4) Splinter Parties
> those parties that have split away from one of the major parties > more important minor parties have been splinter parties > Bull Moose Party – Theodore Roosevelt in 1912 > Progressive Party – Robert La Follette in 1924 > Progressive Party – Henry Wallace in 1948 > States; Rights Party (Dixiecrat) – in 1948 > American Independent Party – George Wallace-1968
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The Minor Parties The Role of Third Parties * Minor parties are usually not supported too much, but have an impact on American politics and the major parties. * The Anti-Masons were first party to use the convention to select their presidential candidate in * Most parties followed suite * Minor parties can have an impact in many ways * They can play a decisive role in the winner of a presidential election if they have a strong candidate
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The Minor Parties * Most of the important issues of American politics were first brought to the public’s attention by a minor party * Progressive income tax, woman’s suffrage, railroad and banking regulations, old-age pensions (Social Security) * One of both major parties take over the ideas that gain support from the public and then present their own plan and it usually will become legislation in Congress.
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The Minor Parties * The parties that have had a visible presidential candidate in the early 2000s include > Reform Party > Libertarian Party > Natural Law Party > Constitution Party > Socialist Party > Prohibition Party > Green Party
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