lpetrich
Contributor
Political analyst and former congressional aide Frank DiStefano has written a book on US political-party systems, "The Next Realignment". He notes that the US has had five previous ones, and he disagrees with a lot of others on a sixth one, thinking it a continuation of the fifth one.
Each party system has characteristic platforms and constituencies for each two parties - the US has always had two major parties. FDS proposes that the parties start out as offering solutions to some big problem that faces the nation, a different solution for each party. But the parties end up outliving this problem and descend into corruption. Parties that survive then get reformed for the next party system -- if they survive.
The two parties are always about the same size, and permanent majorities cannot exist. If one of them starts getting big, then it starts neglecting some of its constituencies, and they leave the party for the other party, shrinking it.
In the beginning, there were no political parties. Those of the Founders who expressed any opinion on that subject expressed very negative opinions. Political parties = hostile factions and strife.
But during the first term of the first President, George Washington himself, the politicians started dividing up into parties, politicians including some of the Founders themselves. They split into Federalists and Democratic-Republicans: Republicans for short. FDS explains them as addressing the question of what kind of nation the new nation will be. The Federalists, like Alexander Hamilton: an industrialized great-power nation with a strong government. The D-R's, like Thomas Jefferson: an agrarian isolationalist nation with a weak government, a nation of small farmers -- and also plantation aristocrats like him.
GW was symathetic to the Feds, and his successor John Adams was a Fed. The next Presidents were all D-R's, but they ended up taking over much of the Fed platform. TJ bought the Louisiana Purchase from France, a huge expanse about the size of the original US. He also sent military expeditions to punish the Barbary Pirates of the north-African coast.
During the War of 1812, New Englanders preferred a less hostile attitude toward Britain and even considered secession. NE was the Feds' stronghold, and the Feds got tainted by association with such dereliction of duty. James Madison, and then James Monroe, both D-R's, succeeded TJ, and the latter one saw an opportunity to destroy the Feds. Not only at the ballot box, but also by recruiting Fed supporters.
By the early 1820's, it seemed that the US was a one-party state with the D-R's as its only party. Something like the original ideal of a no-party state. This was the Era of Good Feelings, when Americans seemed very united.
Each party system has characteristic platforms and constituencies for each two parties - the US has always had two major parties. FDS proposes that the parties start out as offering solutions to some big problem that faces the nation, a different solution for each party. But the parties end up outliving this problem and descend into corruption. Parties that survive then get reformed for the next party system -- if they survive.
The two parties are always about the same size, and permanent majorities cannot exist. If one of them starts getting big, then it starts neglecting some of its constituencies, and they leave the party for the other party, shrinking it.
In the beginning, there were no political parties. Those of the Founders who expressed any opinion on that subject expressed very negative opinions. Political parties = hostile factions and strife.
But during the first term of the first President, George Washington himself, the politicians started dividing up into parties, politicians including some of the Founders themselves. They split into Federalists and Democratic-Republicans: Republicans for short. FDS explains them as addressing the question of what kind of nation the new nation will be. The Federalists, like Alexander Hamilton: an industrialized great-power nation with a strong government. The D-R's, like Thomas Jefferson: an agrarian isolationalist nation with a weak government, a nation of small farmers -- and also plantation aristocrats like him.
GW was symathetic to the Feds, and his successor John Adams was a Fed. The next Presidents were all D-R's, but they ended up taking over much of the Fed platform. TJ bought the Louisiana Purchase from France, a huge expanse about the size of the original US. He also sent military expeditions to punish the Barbary Pirates of the north-African coast.
During the War of 1812, New Englanders preferred a less hostile attitude toward Britain and even considered secession. NE was the Feds' stronghold, and the Feds got tainted by association with such dereliction of duty. James Madison, and then James Monroe, both D-R's, succeeded TJ, and the latter one saw an opportunity to destroy the Feds. Not only at the ballot box, but also by recruiting Fed supporters.
By the early 1820's, it seemed that the US was a one-party state with the D-R's as its only party. Something like the original ideal of a no-party state. This was the Era of Good Feelings, when Americans seemed very united.