chapter 9 it’s party time!!!!!!!! political parties
TRANSCRIPT
Chapter 9
It’s Party Time!!!!!!!!
Political Parties
What is a political party? An organized group that seeks to
Win elections Hold public office Operate the government Determine public policy
Parties exist to: Label candidates (Party ID)
Helpful for voters, shorthand… Govern
Congressional rules and organization are based on the 2 party system
Critique party in power Organize election process
Recruit candidates, mobilize voters, info on issues…
What else do they do? Serve as a linkage institution that
connects citizens to government
Why do we have a two party system?
1. Congressional and local elections Winner take all , plurality (as opposed to
proportional: win 20% of votes get 20% of the seats)
single member district (1 candidate per office)
2. Electoral College Names of Democratic and Republican
candidates are automatically placed on ballots
3rd party candidates must obtain a certain # of signatures to get on the ballot
One / Multiparty systems One party: a single party exercises total
control over whole government China , Iran
Multiparty: a number of parties compete for offices Parties are often based on a few issues ,
illustrating widely differing views on policy France , Italy, Israel
Benefits of political parties Offer clear choices to voters
No need to gather volumes of information on tons of candidates
Eases transition of officials after elections
Weakening of parties (Party De-alignment) Less people identify with single party
More split ticket voting Dem for Pres / Rep for Congress More identify as independent (about 38%)
Organization Parties no longer run the general elections,
less local influence Prior to progressive era parties organized
election, printed ballots, provided incentive for voters to turn out (28 gallons of rum)
Weakening of party identification
Trends in split ticket voting
Parties in US vs. Parties in Europe
US: weaker parties
Federal system: decentralizes party
Regulated by federal and state laws
Candidates picked through primaries, not selected by party leaders
President and Congress elected separately
Presidential appointees
Europe: stronger parties
National government has much more power
Less regulation on parties
People vote more for party than for individual
History of political parties Reading: Due Tomorrow (1/3/13)
Create a chart for each party system with the following information: (there are 6) Dominant party of the time Core beliefs of each party Voting coalitions for each side
Any particular regions? Groups of people?
What caused the change in party systems to occur?
History of the 2 party system Why have there been changes in political
parties? New issues emerge causing new voter
coalitions to be formed :known as Realigning / critical elections
2 types: 1 – parties disappear
Federalist / Whigs 2- coalitions of voters switch party loyalty
1896, 1932, 1968
1st party system: Federalists vs. Democratic Republicans 1796-1816 (DR’s dominate) Starts at the Federal Level: Loose political parties
form in Congress to help pass legislation Federalists = strong Fed gov’t, close relationship with
Brits New England, commercial interests Starts diminishing in power after election of 1800, fades
away after War of 1812 Democratic Republicans = loose coalition organized
against Feds South, agrarian interests Created to defeat Adams in 1796 (he wins) The sole ruling party from 1816-1824: Era of Good
Feelings Really party is dividing
2nd party system emerges because Federalists disappear!!!!!
2nd Party system: Democrats and Whigs 1828-1860 (Dem’s dominate)
Democratic Republicans split to form the Dems and Whigs Dems: South and West, farmers Whigs: North, business interests… loose association of
groups opposed to Jackson Breaks apart due to divisions over slavery
Parties controlled at local level (rather than national level) Nominating conventions, patronage Political participation increases dramatically
Universal white male suffrage
3rd party system emerges because Whigs disappear
3rd party system: Democrats and Republicans 1860-1896 1856: Republicans emerge as a 3rd party to
challenge Kansas Nebraska Act of 1854 (slavery allowed in new territories)
Only 3rd party to become a major party Attracted anti-slavery dems and Whigs
Anti-slavery Free market (as opposed to slave labor) Expansion of railroad High tariffRepublicans dominate presidency and Senate, Dems often control the House
3rd party system: Democrats and Republicans 1860-1896
During this era Dems continue to appeal to Southern, agrarian interests, also appeal to urban workers, immigrants, and Catholics…
Election of 1896: WJ Bryan, dem nominee adopts populist platform and alienate many Northern Dems Nativist ideas alienate immigrants Protestant ideology alienates Catholics Free silver alienates urban workers
Realigning because coalition of voters switch partyDems loose key coalitions of voters and realize they can’t just appeal to farmers (as they tried to in 1896)!!!
4th party system : Democrats and Republicans 1896-1932 (Reps dominate)
Republicans win presidency 7 of 9 elections, control Congress in 15 of 18 elections
Start of solid red/ blue divide (although Republicans dominate North and Democrats dominate the South)
Many election reforms introduced during period ( starts to diminish the power of local parties) Primary / caucus Direct election of Senators Civil Service
4th party system : Democrats and Republicans 1896-1932 (Reps dominate) 1901-1912: Progressive Republicans prevail
The popularity of progressivism influence the national and local agendas of both parties causing them to espouse similar ideology
1912-1920 (Dems win presidency 2x’s, control Congress 1913-1917) Republican party splits
Progressive republicans: low tariff, regulation of business, progressive income tax, support of the worker…
Conservative “traditional” republicans: high taxes, little gov regulation, support industry…
1920-1932: Conservatives emerge Reps: high tariff, low taxes, little regulation of business
4th party system : Democrats and Republicans 1896-1932 (Reps dominate)
Election of 1928: Catholics and immigrants start to move back to the Democratic Party due to the nomination of Al Smith (wet, Catholic)
Great Depression hits 1929 Continues through Hoovers term, getting
worse!!!!! FDR wins election of 1932: New Deal coalition
emerges Catholics, immigrants, Jews, African Americans ,
Urban workers, Dems also keep Southern Whites
5th Party System: Democrats and Republican 1932-1968 (Dems dominate)
Dems: keep New Deal coalition Reps: struggle to offer an alternative, many
programs very popular (majoritarian / Social Security) ; division within their party Liberal republicans = supported bigger gov’t and
New Deal ideology but felt republicans could administer programs more efficiently (dominant in Northeast)
conservative republicans = wanted to dismantle much of the New Deal legislation as well as Lower taxes, less gov’t regulation of business, less
federal control
5th Party System: Democrats and Republican 1932-1968 (Dems dominate)
Dems coalition breaking by the 1960s Civil rights legislation ( alienates S. Dems
as early as the late 1940s, alienates working class Northern Dems by 1960s)
Johnson’s Great Society ( blue collar / white collar divide)
Vietnam War (alienates young dems and upper class intellectuals)
6th Party System: Divided Government 1968-Present
What causes it to emerge: Disintegration of the New Deal coalition leaves the door open for Republicans to re-emerge
Characteristics of this era: Congress and the Presidency often controlled by
different parties Red/ Blue states switch: Why? (2 reasons)
1. Nixon and the “Southern Strategy”: 1968 &72 Race becomes more important than class
For the first half of the 20th century, white protestant southern voters were more liberal on every issue than white protestant northern voters, with one exception: race.
Class was more important than race for decades because of poverty. With growing affluence in the 1960s, however, race began to be more important than class.
6th Party System: Divided Government 1968-Present 2. Reagan (1980) brings religious
conservatives solidly into the Republican party Concentrated more heavily in the South By the election of 1980 the South
becomes solidly republican
6th Party System: Divided Government 1968-Present Democrats continued to appeal to union
members, upper class intellectuals, racial minorities, and progressives (abortion, gay rights, environmentalism, feminism) Women move in larger numbers into the
Democratic party during this era Republicans appeal to Southern, rural,
white, protestant, wealthier individuals
6th Party System: Divided Government 1968-Present During this time period each party has become more
ideologically distinct Why?
Less party identification by voters (de-alignment) Those who continue to identify are less moderate
Nominating process Must appeal to liberal / conservative activists to secure parties
nomination Activist within parties discourage compromise
If you work across the aisle you’re a “sell out”
Pros: clear alternatives are evident for votersCons: inaction
Party system review 1. What is the only 3rd party to become
a majority party?
Republicans
2. Which political party forms as a loose coalition opposed to Andrew Jackson?
2. Whigs
3. What event lead to the dissolution of the Federalist party?
3. War of 1812
4. What 3 groups of voters did Democrats alienate during the election of 1896, starting the 4th party era?
4. Catholics, immigrants, urban workers
5. Why did Southern Whites begin to flee the democratic party in the 1960s?
5. Democrats pushing Civil Rights legislation
AWESOME graph depicting history of parties http
://www.learnnc.org/lp/media/uploads/2009/03/politics-newnation.jpg
http://www.learnnc.org/lp/media/uploads/2009/06/politics-antebellum.jpg
http://www.learnnc.org/lp/media/uploads/2009/09/politics-gildedage.jpg
3rd / minor parties Types:
Ideological: radically different view on government Communist Party Libertarian Party Green Party
Single-issue parties Prohibition Party
Factional / Splinter Parties: break off from existing party Bull Moose Progressives (1912) Dixicrats (1948) American Independent Party (1968)
Economic-protest parties: usually form during economically depressed periods Populists (1892)
What purpose do 3rd / minor parties serve? Often influence platform of major party,
and then die out 1896: Dems/ Populists 1968 & 1972: Reps / American
Independent Party 1992: Dems & Reps / Ross Perot
3rd / minor PartiesCandidate / Party
year % of popular vote
Electoral vote
Ross Perot (Reform Party)
1992 18.9 0
George Wallace
1968 13.5 46
T. Roosevelt 1912 27.4 88
James Weaver
1892 8.5 22
1992: Who voted for Perot?
Impact / importance of 3rd /minor parties Often push a major party to adopt their
ideas Examples????
Can play the “spoiler role” Ralph Nader: 2000 / 2% of vote TR: 1912
Why is it difficult for 3rd parties to emerge in Presidential elections?
Electoral College Winner take all
Public Financing Must be a member of a political party Must show broad based support by raising at least
$5,000 in at least 20 states (100,000) Ballot Access: reading
Why so difficult? Participation in debates
Must meet constitutional requirements What are they?
Must be on enough state ballots to theoretically win 270 electoral votes
5 separate polling organizations must indicate that the candidate has a rating of at least 15%
Nominating process History
1st party era: picked by Congress 2nd party era-6th Party era: Nomination
conventions that rely more heavily on party officials than primary results Non-binding primaries Factional / splinter parties more common
1912, 1948, 1968 6th party era: current primary / caucus system
Delegates representing a candidate are chosen during these elections (similar to electoral college)
6th party system: The current state of our 6th party system Divided government ( no one party controls
both Congress and the Presidency ) Hyper-partisanshipThe problem is not divided government, it is the lack of compromise between the parties, since no one party dominates it is imperative that the parties work together to avoid inaction
What are the causes of hyper- partisanship?
The Media and hyper partisanship
“The increasingly uncivil tone of our publicdialogue is hurting our ability to deal with issuesand discouraging people from participating inthe discussion and entering public life. We aresuffering from a national civility disorder thatis leading us down an unhelpful and unhealthypolitical path.”
Pam JenkinsPresident of Powell Tate
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFQFB5YpDZE John Stewart v. Crossfire
What is the solution to our era of divided government centered around hyper partisanship?
Minor parties Elect more to office?
What would need to change to accomplish this? Ballot access, funding, debate participation, winner take all system
Changes in the electoral system? Multi-member districts instead of single member districts? Run-off elections ? Proportional instead of winner takes all? Nominating process?
More participation in primaries / caucuses? Non-binding primaries / caucuses?
Media Do they exacerbate the partisan divide? Is there anything to be done about this?
7th party system? What might it look like?
Will a Critical issue emerge? Will a Party fade away?
1. As a group, pick and expand on 1 way we can work towards a solution to the current state of hyper-partisanship.
1. What is the problem? What is your solution?
2. 7th party system ,create a scenario : what will cause the 6th party system to end? What will a 7th party system look like?
The Media and Politics“Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”
-Thomas Jefferson
What is the role of the media in politics? Linkage institution: connects people and government officials , helps
to publicize certain issues… Do news organizations have an obligation to the public?
Give them what they want or what they need? Is the news becoming “infotainment” ? Does that matter?
The media and politicsSnapshot of a Typical Day 13 million people listen to "Morning Edition" on NPR 9 million people watch ABC World News Tonight 2.4 million people watch The O'Reilly Factor on Fox
News 1.6 million people watch The Daily Show 1.4 million people visit NYTimes.com 1 million people buy The New York Times print edition 715,000 people buy The Washington Post print edition 350,000 people watch CNN's American Morning
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/newswar/part3/stats.html
The Media and PoliticsThe Big Picture
On a typical day... 57% of Americans watch TV news 54% watch their local news 34% watch cable news channels 28% watch the nightly network news 23% watch the morning news programs (The Today Show, Good Morning
America, etc.) 40% of Americans read a newspaper 36% of Americans listen to news on the radio 23 % of Americans get news online 18% visit news aggregators (Google News, Yahoo! News, AOL News, etc.) 14% visit national TV networks' sites (CNN.com, MSNBC.com,
ABCnews.com, etc.) 14% visit newspaper Web sites 4% visit news blogs 3% visit online news magazines (Slate.com, Salon.com, etc.)http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/newswar/part3/stats.html
Does the media owe us anything?
What is news? Class definition: How to detect bias in the media Selection of stories: are the stories pushing a liberal or
conservative agenda? Labeling: what words are used to describe people and issues
Radical, leftists… Spin: are there subjective comments by the host / reporter?
Is only one side of an issue discussed?
“Court Backs Loaded Guns in Public“ what type of judgment is this headline making?
Analysis of cable network news: due Friday- see website for worksheets
The Media in America Primary objective: make profits (get
ratings so companies will advertise) News media
Vast market Private industry, but important part of the
public sphere Gov’t lightly regulates media
Many other nations govern portions of the media and run it as a public trust
Broadcast Media regulations Gov regulates the content and ownership of
broadcast media, print media has essential no regulation FCC: regulates TV and terrestrial radio (1934)
Prohibit obscenity, indecency, and profanity from 6am to 10pm Super Bowl, South Park, Howard Stern
Equal time rule: must provide candidates for the same political office equal opportunities to communicate message to public
Right of rebuttal: individuals must have opportunity to respond to personal attacks
Print media Little regulation No prior restraint: except under the most
extraordinary of cases , the 1st amendment prohibits the gov from censoring newspapers and magazines NY Times v. United States Are subject to libel laws: can’t print false or malicious
stories Can be forced to pay damages NY Times v. Sullivan (Due Friday)
Brief summary of the case: what is each side’s position Court ruling Impact : the good and the bad
George Washington on political parties: “serves always to distract the public councils and enfeeble the public administration. It agitates the community with ill-founded jealousies and false alarms; kindles the animosity of one part against another; foments occasionally riot and insurrection.”
Problems?!?