Gov 7

Political Parties

Standards:

Strand: Civics and Government

Content Standard III: Students understand the ideals, rights, and responsibilities of citizenship and understand the content and history of the founding documents of the United States with particular emphasis on the United States and New Mexico constitutions and how governments function at local, state, tribal, and national levels. Students will:

9-12 Benchmark 3-A: compare and analyze the structure, power and purpose of government at the local, state, tribal and national levels as set forth in their respective constitutions or governance documents:

Political parties.

What is a political party?

Levels of American political parties.

Functions of parties.

Types of party systems.

1 party systems.

Multi-party systems.

Two party systems.

Party Systems: Crash Course Government and Politics #41

America 101: Why Do We Have a Two-Party System? | History

Reasons why America has a two party systems.

Strong consensus on core political values.

Single member districts.

Legal barriers to third parties.

The force of Historic Traditions.


America 101: Why Red for Republicans and Blue for Democrats? | History

Why Facts Don't Convince People (and what you can do about it)

Party eras in American history.

Key terms.

First party system, 1796 to 1824.

Jackson and the Democrats, 1828 to 1856.

The new Republican era, 1860 to 1928.

FDR and the New Deal coalition, 1932 to 1964.

Divided government, 1968 to present.

Democrats & Republicans: History of Political Parties in the US | Laughing Historically

What Are The Differences Between The Republican And Democratic Parties: sciBRIGHT Politics

From white supremacy to Barack Obama: The history of the Democratic Party

A visit to Mississippi

Obama Voters - 201203

How the South Went Republican: Can Democrats Ever Win There Again? (1992)

How the Republican Party went from Lincoln to Trump

The Secret History of the Southern Strategy

MICHAEL STEELE ADMITS REPUBLICAN PARTY EMPLOYED "SOUTHERN STRATEGY" TO WIN ELECTIONS

Black America Since MLK: And Still I Rise | The Myth of the Welfare Queen

I've Found Reagan's Welfare Queen...

The Willie Horton Ad and the Revolving Door Attack Ads

The Legacy of "Swiftboat"

Sarah Palin's Nuttiest Moments

Sarah Palin-isms: The Donald Trump Endorsement Edition | MSNBC

Crashing The Tea Party (Political Documentary) - Real Stories

Charlottesville: Race and Terror – VICE News Tonight on HBO

White Power Leader Posts Video Of Himself Crying

Neo-Nazi Richard Spencer Got Punched

HuffPost Special Report: When White Hate Comes To Town

Former Neo-Nazi Skinhead is Now Trying to Stop Modern Age Hate Groups

Hate Rising: White Supremacy in America

Neo-Nazis explain why they like Donald Trump

Inside America's Largest Right Wing Militia

Minor parties.

Type of minor parties.

Obstacles to minor party candidates.

The importance and impact of minor parties.

Third Parties Explained: US History Review

Why Can't Third Parties Take Off?

Third Parties: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Essential Question

How do political parties play a large role in the decisions made by government?

Section 1 Development of Parties

Most nations have one or more political parties. In a one-party system, that party is the government, and party leaders set government policy. One-party systems are usually found in nations with authoritarian governments or in countries where religious leaders dominate. In nations with multiparty systems, voters have a wide range of choices on Election Day, and one party rarely gets enough support to control the government. Several parties often combine forces to obtain a majority and form a coalition government. Disputes often arise, and many nations with multiparty systems are politically unstable.

The United States has two major parties—the Republican Party and the Democratic Party. Minor or third parties rarely win major elections. They often form over a single issue, such as slavery. Others form over an ideology, such as the Communist Party USA. A third type is a splinter party that often forms over a political figure, such as Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose Progressive Party. Third parties often influence politics by promoting new ideas.

How Did The U.S. End Up With A Two-Party System?

Section 2 Party Organization

Democrats and Republicans are organized into 50 state parties and thousands of local parties that operate independently of the national organization. Local, state, and national parties select their own officers and raise their own funds. No one is required to join a political party in the United States. In many states, however, citizens must declare their party preference when they register to vote or when they vote in certain elections. A voter may also declare that he or she is an independent.

The basic local party unit is the precinct, several of which comprise a larger district called a ward. The next level is the party's county committee. Representatives from the county committee make up the state central committee, which chooses the state party chairperson. The state committee helps elect the party's candidates for state government offices. The national party organization includes the national convention and the national committee.

Political parties recruit candidates for public office. They also bring important issues to the public's attention. Congress and state legislatures are organized and carry on their work on the basis of party affiliation. Political parties also dispense patronage to their members. The party that is out of power in the legislative or executive branches assumes the role of "watchdog" over the government.

Political Parties: Crash Course Government and Politics #40

Section 3 Nominating Candidates

To win elections, political parties must offer appealing candidates and conduct expensive campaigns. Every four years, each major party gathers in a national convention to nominate their candidates for president and vice president to run in the November general election. Before these conventions, however, presidential candidates must go through one or more of these preliminary selection methods: caucus, nominating convention, primary election, or petition. The method most commonly used today to select candidates is the direct primary. Either the candidate who wins the primary gets all the state's convention delegates (called "winner-take-all"), or each candidate gets delegates based on how many popular votes he or she receives in the primary. Primaries eliminate many opponents.

Before the start of the national convention, the national committee tells each state party organization how many votes (delegates) the state will have. Several committees at the convention determine the rules, approve state delegates, and write the party's platform. At recent conventions, there is no mystery about who will be nominated, but in past conventions, uncommitted delegates were actively wooed by the candidates. During the convention balloting, the chair of each state delegation calls out the delegates' votes. The candidate who receives a majority becomes the nominee for the party in the general election.

Understanding the Primaries: Delegates, Democracy, and America's Nonstop Political Party

Nomination Process for Presidential Candidates

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