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Parties and What They Do

Parties and What They Do. What Is a Political Party. Political Party: a group of people who seek to control government through the winning of elections and the holding of public office. This describes the two major parties in American politics. Republicans. Democrats.

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Parties and What They Do

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  1. Parties and What They Do

  2. What Is a Political Party • Political Party: a group of people who seek to control government through the winning of elections and the holding of public office. • This describes the two major parties in American politics.

  3. Republicans

  4. Democrats

  5. A political party is a group of persons, joining together on the basis of common principles, who seek to control government in order to affect certain public policies.

  6. What Do Parties Do? • In American History, it is clean that political parties are essential to democratic government. • Parties are the major mechanisms behind the development of broad policy and leadership choices. • They are the medium through which those options are presented to the people.

  7. Political parties are the vital link between the people and their government.

  8. Parties serve the democratic ideal in another important way. • They bring conflicting groups together, as well as modify and encourage compromise among the contending views of different interest groups.

  9. Nominating Candidates • The major function of a political party is to nominate candidates for public offices. • The party selects a candidate and then presents them to the voters. • Then the parties help their candidates win elections. • To have a function democracy, there must be a procedure for finding candidates for office.

  10. The nominating function is almost exclusively a party function in the United States. • It is the one activity that most clearly sets political parties apart from all of the other groups in politics.

  11. Informing and Activating Supporters • Parties inform the people, and inspire and activate their interest and participation in public affairs. • Parties try to inform and inspire voters in several ways. • Primarily, they campaign for their candidates, take stands on issues, and criticize the candidates and the positions of their opponents.

  12. Remember, both parties want to win elections, and that consideration has much to do with the stands they take on most issues. • Both parties try to shape positions that will attract as many voters as possible.

  13. Government • Congress and state legislatures are organized on party lines, and they conduct much of their business on the basis of partisanship. • Which is the strong support of their party and its policy stands. • Parties provide a basis for the conduct of government.

  14. In the complicated separation of powers arrangement, the executive and legislative branches must cooperate with one another if government is to accomplish anything. • It is political parties that regularly provide the channels through which these two branches are able to work together. • Political parties have played a significant role in the process of constitutional change.

  15. Watchdogs • Parties act as watchdogs over the conduct of the public’s business. • This is particularly true of the party out of power. • It plays this role as it criticizes the policies and behavior of the party in power.

  16. In American politics the party in power is the party that controls the executive branch of government – the presidency at the national level or the governorship at the state level. • In effect, the party out of power attempts to convince the voters that they should throw them out.

  17. In short, the party out of power plays the important role of “the loyal opposition” • Those opposed to the party in power but loyal to the people and the nation.

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