Chapter 7: Political Parties Flashcards

1
Q

Political parties

A

Organization that seek to achieve power by winning public office

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2
Q

Sudden, large, durable shifts in the

A

Electoral balance and the composition of the coalitions that support the major parties

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3
Q

Presidential elections

A

1) 1869: Abraham Lincoln, Republican
2) 1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democrat

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4
Q

The Federalist Party (1788)

A

The country’s first political party to support John Adam’s presidential candidacy

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5
Q

The Democratic-Republican Party (1792)

A

The country’s second political party.

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6
Q

It was comprised of Thomas Jefferson and other Anti-Federalist support

A

Jefferson’s presidential candidacy

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7
Q

Each party lobbied the state legislature to select

A

Electors who promised in advance to either elect Adams or Jefferson depending on which candidate won the popular vote in their states

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8
Q

Significance of the Presidential Election of 1796

A

It was the first time two candidates campaigned as members of opposing parties

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9
Q

It was the beginning of the Electoral College’s transformation from

A

An independent check on the popular vote to a “rubberstamp” on the popular vote

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10
Q

Jefferson’s Democratic-Republican Party organized

A

Voters circulated literature and rallied the masses to their causes. Thomas Jefferson won the election.

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11
Q

The election of 1800 was the first time in American democracy that

A

The control of government passes peacefully from one party to another based on an election outcome

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12
Q

After the election of 1796, the Federalist Party

A

Never won another presidential election

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13
Q

By 1820, the Federalist Party

A

Ceased to exist

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14
Q

President Andrew Jackson (elected in 1828) transformed the

A

Democratic-Republican Party into the Democratic Party in 1829

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15
Q

Jackson’s opponent formed the

A

Whig Party (1836), and by 1840, the Whigs won the presidency

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16
Q

Factions began to form in the

A

Whig party over the issue of slavery

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17
Q

The Republican Party formed in

A

1854 to oppose slavery

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18
Q

In the election of 1860,

A

Abraham Lincoln was elected president

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19
Q

From 1860-1912 (except for 1885 & 1893),

A

Republican won the presidency

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20
Q

During the Great Depression, the Democratic Party’s nominee, Franklin D.Roosevelt was

A

Elected in a landslide and was the only president to be elected to four terms

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21
Q

The New Deal Coalition

A

Working classes and union members, especially in large cities, Catholics and Jews, African Americans, poor people, and Southern whites

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22
Q

By 1972, the Democratic Party became associated with

A

Anti-war protesters, civil rights advocates, feminists organizations, and liberal activists generally, all who were to the left of the electorate in general

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23
Q

The Reagan Coalition

A

Economic conservatives, social conservatives concerned about crime, illegal drugs, and racial conflict, and religious fundamentalists

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24
Q

Southern Whites were concerned about

A

Racial issues and affirmative action, anti-communists who wanted the U.S to maintain a strong military

25
Q

Loyal Democratic Party members

A

1) African Americans and other minorities
2) Government employee
3) Union leader
4) Liberal intellectuals in the media and universities
5) Feminists organizations and environmentalists
6) Gays, lesbians, and bisexuals

26
Q

The Democratic Leadership Council was formed in the 1980s to

A

Create a “new” Democratic Party closer to the center of the political spectrum

27
Q

The chair of the committee was

A

Then governor Bill Clinton

28
Q

The council’s concern was its traditional support for

A

Social justice and social welfare programs were overshadowing its commitment to economic prosperity

29
Q

When Clinton became president, he reverted to

A

Liberal policy directions rather than pursue the moderate line he promoted as a “new” Democrat

30
Q

In 1994, the Republican Party won

A

The majorities in the House and the Senate

31
Q

In 2000, the Republican Party continued to won

A

The presidency

32
Q

The party abandoned its principle of

A

Lower federal spending and shrinking the size of the federal government and failed to secure the country’s borders

33
Q

In 2006, the party lost its

A

Majority in Congress

34
Q

In a democracy, parties are supposed to

A

Organize majorities around broad principles of government in order to win public office and enact the principles into law

35
Q

Political parties once nominated candidates for their party and played a major role in

A

Campaign organization and finance.

36
Q

Campaigns are directed by

A

Professional campaign management firm or by the candidates’ personal organization not by parties

37
Q

Most political candidates are

A

Self-recruited, not the party

38
Q

The major political parties cannot control who their

A

Nominee the party’s entry in a general election rate will be

39
Q

The party was once the

A

Medium through which candidates communicated with voters

40
Q

Now, candidates communicate directly with voters through

A

The mass media

41
Q

Parties have no way to bind their elected officials to the

A

Party platform or even to their campaign promises

42
Q

Historically, nominations were made by

A

Caucus or party convention

43
Q

The caucus was the

A

Earliest nominating process

44
Q

Party leaders would meet

A

Several months before the election and decide who to nominate

45
Q

Nominating convention

A

Large meetings of delegates sent by local party organizations to nominate their party’s candidate

46
Q

The presidential nominee announces his/her choice of the

A

Vice presidential candidate

47
Q

The president’s choice is determined by

A

Ticket balancing (someone who will balance the ticket based on Washington experience, ideology, or geography)

48
Q

Primary elections

A

Registered voters select who will be their party’s nominee in the general election

49
Q

Closed primaries

A

Only voters who are registered as Democrat or Republican can vote in their chosen party’s primary

50
Q

Open primaries

A

Anyone regardless of party affiliation may choose to vote in either party’s primary election

51
Q

General elections

A

Election to choose among candidates nominated by parties and/or independent candidates who gained access to the ballot by peitition

52
Q

Members of the public who have registered with a party make up that

A

Party’s electorate

53
Q

Party identification

A

Members of a party’s electorate have a psychological link to their party

54
Q

Minor parties in the U.S are called

A

Third parties

55
Q

Third parties are political parties that

A

Challenge the two major parties in an election

56
Q

Winner-Takes-All Electoral System

A

Elections are usually determined in plurality winner-takes-all election whereby only one candidate, the one who wins the most popular votes wins the election

57
Q

The Democratic Party is more likely to favor

A

Increasing the number of social programs, increasing regulations on business, and decreasing domestic oil production

58
Q

The Republican Party is more likely to favor

A

Increasing spending on the military,, increasing domestic oil production and decreasing regulation on business