the ulitmate history prject
DESCRIPTION
i havent gotten around to fixin it yetTRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
THE TIMELINE OF POLITICAL PARTIES
Soderia Kakoulakis, Wendy Wen, Angela Mei, Kevin Zhang,
Yahui Liang
![Page 2: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
FEDERALISTS
Time period: 1787-1788
Origin: debate over ratification
Platform: ratify Constitution, stronger central gov’t
Key People: Washington, Hamilton, Franklin,
Jefferson, Madison
Supporters: people on Atlantic coast, city dwellers
Decline: transformed into the
Federalists/Hamiltonians
![Page 3: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
ANTI-FEDERALISTS
Time Period: 1789-1790Started by being opposed to Federalists and the ConstitutionSupport strong state governments
• Anti-Federalists Papers• Opposed Constitution of 1787
• Supporter of Articles of Confederation• Afraid that president may become something of a monarch
Farmers/Tradesmen
Patrick Henry/James Monroe /James
Winthrop/Richard Henry Lee/Patrick Henry
Decline:
![Page 4: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLICANS
1792-1824
Dispute between Federalists and Anti-Federalists over the ratification of the
Constitution
Support of strong Central Government• Strict interpretation of the Constitution • Pro-French• Small peacetime army and navy• Favor agriculture• No national bank• Opposed tariffs
Thomas Jefferson/James Madison
Skilled workers, small farmers, plantation owners
Decline:
![Page 5: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
ERA OF GOOD FEELINGS
![Page 6: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
1828 JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY
![Page 7: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
1828 NATIONAL REPUBLICANS
-time period: 1825-1837
-origin: Disputes between the government policies of Andrew
Jackson and John Quincy Adams
-platform/key issues- American System (High tariffs, internal
improvements, Bank of the United States)
-key people: John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay
-supporters: Northerners
-decline: The loss of the election of 1832, Henry Clay lost. Turned
into the Whig party
![Page 8: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
1834 WHIGS
-time period: 1834-1856
-origin: the whig party emerged from the reaction to the authoritarian policies
of Andrew Jackson.
-platform/key issues: American System, Manufacturing, issue of slavery split
the whig party, strong federal government.
-key people: Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, William Henry Harrison, Millard
Fillmore,
-supporters: Northeast and boarder states, doctors, lawyers, merchants,
ministers, bankers, storekeepers, factory owners, commercially-oriented
farmers and large-scale planters
-decline
![Page 9: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
1848 FREE SOIL PARTY
Found: 1848
Platform: Opposed the expansion of slavery into western
territories, "Free Soil, Free Speech, Free Labor, and Free Men"
Key Figures: Martin Van Buren, John P. Hale, Salmon P. Chase
Supporters: Upstate New York, Western Massachusetts, Ohio,
former anti-slavery members of the Whig Party and the Democratic
Party
Events: Election of 1848, Election of 1852
Dissolved: 1854
![Page 10: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
1860 SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN DEMOCRATS
![Page 11: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
KNOW NOTHING PARTY
Dissolved: 1860
Found: 1845 à originated in new york
Supporters: Protestant males of British lineage, mostly middle-class workers and farmers, nativists (against
german/irish immigrants)
Platform: Severe limits on immigration, especially from Catholic countries.
Restricting political office to native-born Americans of English and/or Scottish lineage and Protestant
persuasion.
Mandating a wait of 21 years before an immigrant could gain citizenship.
Restricting public school teacher positions to Protestants.
Mandating daily Bible readings in public schools.
Restricting the sale of liquor.
Restricting the use of languages other than English.
Key Figures: Millard Fillimore, Andrew Jackson Donelson
Events: Election of 56, Louisville Riot
![Page 12: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
SOCIALIST PARTY
Founded: August 1, 1901
Origin: Socialism and Labor Disputes
Platform: The Socialist Party stands for the abolition of every form of
domination and exploitation, whether based on social class, gender,
race/ethnicity, age, education, sexual orientation, or other characteristics.
Key people: Eugene V.. Debs, Victor Berger, Meyer London, Alfred
Wagenknecht, and Morris Hillquit
Supporters: Trade Unions, Progressives, social reformers, populist, and
immigrants
Dissolved: December 31. 1972, succeeded by Socialist Party USA
![Page 13: The ulitmate history prject](https://reader033.vdocuments.mx/reader033/viewer/2022052600/558521b0d8b42aea748b4dc2/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
TEA PARTY
Founded: 2009
Origin: a series of locally- and nationally-coordinatedprotests. The protests are partially in
response to several Federal laws: the Emergency Ecomonic Stabilization Act the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act and the 2009-2010 Healthcare Reform Bill.
Platform: The Contract from America is a political agenda of the Tea Party
movement which was proposed on April 15, 2010 at the Washington Monument in
Washington D.C. The introduction states that it is based on the principles of
individual liberty, limited government and economic freedom.
Key people: Dick Armey, Sarah Palin,
Supporters: Republicans, Conservatives,
Decline