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Political Parties

  • Federalist vs. Anti-Federalist (1797-1798)

    Federalist vs. Anti-Federalist (1797-1798)
    Federalist:
    -Supported Constitution
    -Wealthy and educated should hold all power
    -Supported by "Federalist Papers"
    -George Washington, John Adams, James Madison vs. Anti-Federalist:
    -Opposed Constitution
    -Common, uneducated person should have most power in government
    -Patrick Henry, George Mason
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    Political Parties

  • Democratic-Republican Party (1799-1828)

    Democratic-Republican Party (1799-1828)
    -Agrarian-based, decentralized, democratic government
    -Established to oppose the Federalists
    -Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson
  • National Republican Party (1824-1833)

    National Republican Party (1824-1833)
    -Nationally financed internal improvements and a protective tariff, which would promote faster economic development
    -Wanted to build up the Nation's Defense
    -James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams
  • Anti-Mason Party (1828-1838)

    Anti-Mason Party (1828-1838)
    -First "third-party" in the US
    -It strongly opposed Freemasonry as a single-issue party
    -James Anderson, John the Baptist, Thomas Smith Webb
  • Democratic Party (1828-present)

    Democratic Party (1828-present)
    -Liberal, pro-business ideas
    -Social and economic equality
    -Want more government involvement
    -Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton
  • Whig Party (1832-1860)

    Whig Party (1832-1860)
    -Republican party changed their name and adopted the ideas of the British liberal party
    -Favored reform
    -William Henry Harrison, Henry Clay, Zachary Taylor, John Tyler
  • Know Nothing Party (American Party) (1845-1860)

    Know Nothing Party (American Party) (1845-1860)
    -Split from the Whig Party
    -Originated from Irish immigrants who wanted to "purify" politics by going against the Irish Catholic church
    -Empowered by fear of government being taken over by German and Irish immigrants
    -Lewis Charles Levin, Millard Fillmore,
  • Free Soil Party (1848-1854)

    Free Soil Party (1848-1854)
    -The anti-slavery faction of the Whig Party
    -Third party and single-issue party (slavery)
    -Opposed slavery and tried to limit the spread of it
    -Martin Van Buren, Charles Francis Adams
  • Northern Democrat Party (1850s-1860s)

    Northern Democrat Party (1850s-1860s)
    -Opposed the idea of slavey and the expansion
    -Split from the Southern Democrat party during the 1860 election
    -Stephen A. Douglas
  • Radical Republicans (1854-1877)

    Radical Republicans (1854-1877)
    -Strongly opposed slavery
    -Wanted Rights for freedmen
    -Ulysses S. Grant, Charles Sumner, Thaddeus Stevens
  • Conservative Republican (1854-present)

    Conservative Republican (1854-present)
    -Formed to go against the Kansas-Nebraska act
    -Founded by ex-whigs and ex-free soilers
    -Andrew Johnson
  • Southern Democrats (1850s-1860s)

    Southern Democrats (1850s-1860s)
    -Wanted to keep slavery
    -Started a national divide between the North and the South
    -Jefferson Davis, John R. Edwards, D. Robert Graham
  • National Union Party (1864-1868)

    National Union Party (1864-1868)
    -Furthered believes of national interests above individual interests and states' rights
    -Opposition of the expansion of slavery
    -Eventually merged into Republican Party
    -Abraham Lincoln
  • Populists Party (1891-1908)

    Populists Party (1891-1908)
    -Known as the "Peoples' Party" because it wanted to represent the average person against the rich, higher-up persons
    -Highly critical of capitalism, and allied itself with labor workers
    -James B. Weaver, William Jennings Bryan, Thomas E. Watson
  • Progressive Party (Blue Moose Party) (1912-1916)

    Progressive Party (Blue Moose Party) (1912-1916)
    -Third party
    -Took advanced positions on progressive reforms, and attracting some leading reformers
    -Nicknamed the Bull Moose Party after journalists quoted Roosevelt saying that he felt "fit as a bull moose" shortly after the new party was formed
    -Theodore Roosevelt