History of political parties in America
History of political parties in America
Americans are deeply divided when it comes to politics. In 2016鈥攆or the first time in two decades鈥攎ore than half of each party said they in "deeply unfavorable terms." Slightly fewer than half thought the other side was a "threat to the nation's well-being." A recent survey about 42% of people think members of the other party are "downright evil." While some suggest the nation hasn't seen such division since the Civil War, the country has a history of disparate political views since the signing of the Constitution.
President George Washington was an independent, but our nation's second leader, John Adams, was a Federalist鈥攁 party spawned from the ideals of Alexander Hamilton, who wanted a strong central government. Adams lost to Thomas Jefferson, who opposed Hamilton and helped form the Democratic-Republicans鈥攏ow the modern Democratic Party.
America's creators didn't mention political parties in any of the founding documents, and Washington championed moderation. In his 1796 farewell address, the nation's first president cautioned the new country's citizens against the destructive nature of divided factions. He : "We must drive far away the demon of party spirit and local reproach."
Despite Washington's warnings, political parties popped up after he left office. Since 1852, either a Democrat or Republican has occupied the White House. Only once did a third-party candidate come in second: when Teddy Roosevelt ran for president on the Bull Moose Party ticket in 1912.
Early Republicans favored big government and fought for civil rights, while Democrats wanted to keep slavery and limit federal involvement. The political priorities of each party have changed鈥斺攐ver the past 150 years.
Though we have a Republican president, only a little more than a quarter of registered voters . In 2017, 33% said they were Democrats and 37% identified as independents. In the 2016 election, members of the Green and Libertarian parties were also on the ballot, but third parties have yet to get close to winning the presidency. Voters tend to go with a candidate who has a better shot at winning, which has kept the two-party system in place.
麻豆原创 , political party websites, and news reports to compile a list of 30 years in the history of political parties in America. Click through to find out how factions have changed since the Constitution was signed.
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1787: Alexander Hamilton inspires the Federalist Party
In 1787鈥攁s Lin Manuel Miranda sings on Broadway鈥擜lexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay in support of the Constitution, which was adopted a year later. The Federalist Party was established by 1795 and gave the U.S. a strong central government, tax infrastructure, and a national bank. President John Adams, the first and only Federalist president, took office in 1797.
1796: Thomas Jefferson helps form the Democratic-Republican Party
Thomas Jefferson and James Madison founded the Democratic-Republican Party鈥攕ometimes referred to as the Republican Party, but not the one that exists today鈥攊n opposition to the Federalists. The election of 1796 was the first with candidates from two parties. Jeffersonian-Republicans were of the modern Democratic Party. At the time, they believed in small government: a major component of today's Republican Party.
1814: Federalist party starts to dissolve
After the Federalists against the British, their party started to lose favor. They were never able to get another president elected after John Adams, and eventually dissolved in the 1820s.
1817: The Era of Good Feelings
From 1817 through 1825, when the Federalist Party ceased to be, President James Monroe the country during a period known as the Era of Good Feelings鈥攁lthough his presidency came during an economic depression and controversy surrounding slavery.
1827: Anti-Masonic Party forms
The Anti-Masonic Party, the first third party, and was nationally recognized a year later. Its members opposed the Freemasons, a fraternity they felt was opposed to American ideals. The party introduced the concept of conventions to nominate candidates, along with the idea of developing a party platform. They eventually dissolved a decade or so later.
1836: Whig Party forms
When the Anti-Masonic Party fizzled out, some of its members helped set up the Whig Party. The Whigs who they felt acted more like the monarch they had fled. The group split over slavery and dissolved when the Republican Party officially formed.
1840: Liberty Party forms
The Liberty Party's sole mission was . Members felt the government had the power to end slavery, and the current political parties weren't doing enough on the issue. Members of the party later ended up as part of the anti-slavery Free Soil Party, which was the Republican Party.
1854: Republican Party forms
On July 6, 1854, the newly formed Republican Party in Jackson, Mich. The Grand Old Party (GOP) was against the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which would have allowed slavery in new territories as the U.S. expanded westward. The U.S. has been dominated by either the Republicans or Democrats ever since.
1860: First Republican president elected
With only 40% of the popular vote, President Abraham Lincoln became the first Republican president in 1860. Lincoln benefited from a divided Democratic Party. By the time he took office a year later, seven states to form the Confederate States of America. In 1863, President Lincoln , the first major step toward ending slavery.
1872: Victoria Woodhull represents the Equal Rights Party
About 50 years before women gained the right to vote, Victoria Woodhull on a ticket for the Equal Rights Party. Civil rights leader Frederick Douglass was nominated as her vice president, though he never publicly accepted the role. Woodhull wasn't officially on the ballot and was in fact vilified for her views on women's rights, which included having a choice in who they would marry and the unobstructed freedom to divorce.
1883: Pendleton Act passes
With the passage of the Pendleton Act, government officials could no longer simply fill positions with their friends or those who had supported their political party. Federal jobs based on merit. The act also prohibited seeking campaign funds on federal government property.
1892: Populist Party forms
Unhappy with the expansion of railroads on their land, farmers (or Populist Party) in 1892. They wanted the government to issue them credit through a 鈥減ostal savings bank,鈥 and give them a better transportation deal by taking control of the railroads. The Populist Party candidate for president received one million votes in 1896, but the party never made it to mainstream politics.
1901: Socialist Party forms
In 1901, Eugene Debs , with the goal of giving more control to the people. In 1912, nearly a million people voted for Debs for president. The creation of the Socialist Party ended up making Democratic and Republican parties more progressive, forcing them to pay more attention to women's suffrage, fair pay, and the end of child labor. Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent running for president in 2020, to the mainstream of the Democratic Party after his 2016 presidential bid.
1912: Progressive Bull Moose Party forms
On June 22, 1912, former Republican President Theodore Roosevelt proposed the creation of a more progressive party. The group nominated him as its presidential candidate. When Roosevelt he felt strong as a 鈥渂ull moose,鈥 the party garnered the nickname Bull Moose Party. His efforts only split the Republican vote 鈥 he ran against President William Howard Taft鈥攁nd Democratic candidate Woodrow Wilson became president. The Progressive Bull Moose Party .
1933: New Deal Era begins
When Republican President Herbert Hoover government money to provide unemployment relief during the Great Depression, voters looked to the Democratic Party. President Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in 1933, ushering in the New Deal Era. Roosevelt and Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins Social Security, the 40-hour work week, minimum wage, and benefits to the unemployed.
1971: Federal Election Campaign Act passes
The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 by candidates and political parties in a federal election. The act, which also required more transparent disclosure about donations, was designed to prevent the misuse of campaign financing.
1972: Libertarian Party holds first convention
The Libertarian Party , and held their first national convention a year later. Libertarians propose small government in every aspect; they don't want interference in a citizen's personal life or business dealings. They would prefer that the government's only role be 鈥減rotecting people from force and fraud.鈥 In 2016, Gary Johnson of the popular vote when he ran for president on the Libertarian Party ticket.
1974: Federal Election Campaign Act amended
President Richard M. Nixon鈥攖he only president to resign鈥攕igned the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA) into law in 1972, but the Watergate scandal uncovered a litany of campaign finance abuses within his administration. Congress then including further restrictions on the amount an individual could contribute to a political party.
1975: Federal Election Commission forms
Congress continued to regulate campaign finance in 1975, forming the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to enforce FECA. The president to the FEC, but only three people can represent the same political party. The FEC also new political parties can be recognized as a national committee. If a party is only operating at the state level, it doesn't need to register with the FEC.
1976: Supreme Court considers money speech
In Buckley v. Valeo, the Supreme Court many of the limitations imposed by FECA were unconstitutional. They decided that limiting how much a candidate or their family could spend on a political election was a violation of the First Amendment. Money raised for political parties was considered protected speech.
1980: President Ronald Reagan unites Republicans
While Democrats of a former actor running for the nation's highest office, Ronald Reagan managed to unite Republicans and win the 1980 presidential election. It wasn't until the 2016 presidential election that voters felt as negatively about each party's candidate.
1984: Green Party forms
Formed in 1984, the Green Party 鈥渆cological politics and social justice, peace, and non-violence. Ralph Nader ran for president on the Green Party ticket in 2000 and received nearly three million votes. Some say Nader cost Al Gore the election. After the 2016 presidential election, Green Party candidate Jill Stein expressed her dismay with both the Democratic and Republican parties, "...lifted the curtain on what an incredibly toxic and predatory political system the U.S. has."
1991: Constitution Party forms
Conservative Howard Phillips in 1991, now the fifth-largest political party. It was officially recognized as a national party four years later. In 1999, the party changed its name to the Constitution Party in order to 鈥渂etter reflect the party's primary focus of returning government to the U.S. Constitution's provisions and limitations.鈥
1992: Ross Perot runs for president as an independent
In 1992, Ross Perot entered, withdrew, then re-entered the presidential race against incumbent President George H.W. Bush and soon-to-be President Bill Clinton. He of the popular vote鈥攐ne of the largest ever for a candidate not attached to a political party鈥攂ut failed to win any electoral votes.
1995: Ross Perot forms Reform Party
Following his 1992 presidential bid, Ross Perot formed the Reform Party 鈥 which has a "moderate, centrist, and populist" platform 鈥 and ran as the party's presidential candidate in 1996. Perot of the popular vote.
2000: California Democratic Party v. Jones
In 1996, California that allowed open primaries. A closed primary would mean Californians registered as Democrats could only vote in the Democratic primary, and vice-versa. The law was challenged by California's Democratic, Republican, Libertarian, and Peace and Freedom parties. Since someone who doesn't agree with the party could vote in the primary, the Supreme Court ruled California's proposition of a political party's First Amendment right of association to choose their own leaders.
2002: Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act passes
Republican Sen. John McCain and Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA), better known as the McCain-Feingold Act. It was designed to make the money funding campaigns and their ads more transparent by limiting the influence of 鈥渟oft money鈥 coming from special interest groups and national political parties. After the BCRA, candidates also had to include a 鈥淪tand By Your Ad鈥 line, disclosing their support for a political ad.
2008: First black president elected
In 2008, President Barack Obama, a Democrat, defeated Republican John McCain. After Obama's election, Democratic voters , better-educated, and identified as less-religious at a faster rate than the rest of the country. Conversely, Republicans became older than the U.S. at large.
2010: Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission
Following the legal framework set by Buckley v. Valeo鈥攅stablishing that money is speech鈥攖he Supreme Court struck down the provision of the BCRA pertaining to corporations and unions. The majority held that those groups to spend as much as they want on political advertising, as long as they don't coordinate directly with a candidate or campaign. The decision seems to have more than Democrats. President Barack Obama condemned the decision in his 2010 State of the Union address, and Democrats remain opposed to the decision.
2016: Political parties become more polarized
In 2016, Republican Donald Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton 鈥 the first woman to run for president on a major party ticket. During and after the election, politics in the U.S. seemed to become more polarized, with more than half of Democrats and Republicans saying they "in deeply negative terms." In 2019, the partisan divide between Republicans and Democrats especially on issues like health care, climate change, and aid to the poor.