Founding Fathers The subject of political parties is not mentioned in the
United States Constitution. The
Founding Fathers did not originally intend for American politics to be partisan. In
Federalist No. 9 and
No. 10,
Alexander Hamilton and
James Madison, respectively, wrote specifically about the dangers of domestic
political factions. In addition, the first
President of the United States,
George Washington, was not a member of any political party at the time of his election nor throughout his tenure as president. Furthermore, he hoped that political parties would not form, fearing conflict and stagnation, as outlined in his
Farewell Address. Historian
Richard Hofstadter wrote that the Founders "did not believe in parties as such, scorned those that they were conscious of as historical models, had a keen terror of party spirit and its evil consequences", but "almost as soon as their national government was in operation, [they] found it necessary to establish parties." Since their creation in the 1800s, the two dominant parties have changed their ideologies and bases of support considerably, while maintaining their names. In the aftermath of the
U.S. Civil War, the Democratic party was an agrarian, pro-states-rights, anti-civil rights, pro-
easy money, anti-tariff, anti-bank coalition of
Jim Crow Solid South and Western small farmers. At the same time, the Republican party had shifted to become a right-wing party, disproportionately composed of family business, older, rural, southern, religious, and white working-class voters. Along with this realignment,
political and ideological polarization increased leading to greater tension and "deadlocks" in attempts to pass ideologically controversial bills.
First Party System: 1792–1824 (Federalist vs Democratic-Republican) The beginnings of the American
two-party system emerged from
George Washington's immediate circle of advisers, which included
Alexander Hamilton and
James Madison. Hamilton and Madison wrote against political factions in
The Federalist Papers (1788), but by the 1790s, differing views concerning the course of the new country had developed, and people who held these views tried to win support for their cause by banding together. Followers of Hamilton's ideology took up the name "
Federalist"; they favored a strong central government that would support the interests of commerce and industry and close ties to Britain. Followers of the ideology of Madison and
Thomas Jefferson, initially referred to as "
Anti-Federalists", became known as Republicans, which for clarity's sake is today called the "
Democratic-Republicans"; they preferred a decentralized
agrarian republic in which the federal government had limited power. The
Jeffersonians came to power in 1800. The Federalists survived in the Northeast, but their refusal to support the
War of 1812 verged on secession and was a devastating blow to the party when the war ended well. The
Era of Good Feelings under
President James Monroe (1816–1824) marked the end of the First Party System and was a brief period in which partisanship was minimal.
Second Party System: 1828–1854 (Democratic vs Whig) By 1828, the Federalists had disappeared as an organization, and
Andrew Jackson's presidency split the Democratic-Republican Party: "Jacksonians" became the Democratic Party, while those following the leadership of
John Quincy Adams became the
National Republican Party (unrelated to the later Republican Party). After the 1832 election, opponents of Jackson—primarily National Republicans,
Anti-Masons, and others—coalesced into the
Whig Party led by
Henry Clay. This marked the return of the two-party political system, but with different parties. The early Democratic Party stood for individual rights and state rights, supported the primacy of the Presidency (
executive branch) over the other branches of government, and opposed banks (namely the
Bank of the United States), high tariffs, and modernizing programs that they felt would build up
industry at the expense of farmers. It styled itself as the party of the "common man". Presidents
Andrew Jackson,
Martin Van Buren, and
James K. Polk were all Democrats who defeated Whig candidates, but by narrow margins. Jackson's populist appeal and campaigning inspired a tradition of not just voting for a Democrat, but identifying as a Democrat; in this way, political parties were becoming a feature of social life, not just politics. Presidents
William Henry Harrison and
Zachary Taylor were both Whig candidates. In the 1850s, the issue of slavery took center stage, with disagreement in particular over the question of whether slavery should be permitted in the country's new territories in the West. The Whig Party attempted to straddle the issue with the
Kansas–Nebraska Act, where the status of slavery would be decided based on
popular sovereignty (i.e. the citizens of each territory, rather than Congress, would determine whether slavery would be allowed). The Whig Party sank to its death after the overwhelming electoral defeat by Franklin Pierce in the
1852 presidential election. Ex-Whigs joined the
Know Nothing party or the newly formed, anti-slavery
Republican Party. While the Know Nothing party was short-lived, Republicans would survive the intense politics leading up to the Civil War. The primary Republican policy was that slavery be excluded from all the territories. Just six years later, this new party captured the presidency when
Abraham Lincoln won the election of 1860. This election marked the beginning of the Democratic and Republican parties as the major parties of America.
Third Party System: 1854–1890s (Democratic vs Republican) The anti-slavery
Republican Party emerged in 1854. It adopted many of the economic policies of the Whigs, such as national banks, railroads, high tariffs, homesteads, and aid to land grant colleges. After the defeat of the Confederacy in the
Civil War, the Republican Party became the dominant party in America for decades, associated with the successful military defense of the Union and often known as the "Grand Old Party" (GOP). The Republican coalition consisted of businessmen, shop owners, skilled craftsmen, clerks, and professionals who were attracted to the party's modernization policies and newly enfranchised African Americans (
freedmen). The
Democratic Party was usually in opposition during this period, although it often controlled the Senate or the House of Representatives or both. The Democrats were known as "basically conservative and agrarian-oriented", and like the Republicans, the Democrats were a broad-based voting coalition. Democratic support came from the
Redeemers of the
Jim Crow "
Solid South" (i.e. solidly Democratic), where "repressive legislation and physical intimidation [were] designed to prevent newly enfranchised African Americans from voting". Civil War and
Reconstruction issues polarized the parties until the
Compromise of 1877, which saw the withdrawal of the last
federal troops from the
Southern United States. (By 1905 most black people were effectively
disenfranchised in every Southern state.) During the post-Civil War era of the nineteenth century, parties were well-established as the country's dominant political organizations, and party allegiance had become an important part of most people's consciousness. Party loyalty was passed from fathers to sons, and in an era before motion pictures and radio, party activities, including spectacular campaign events complete with uniformed marching groups and torchlight parades, were a part of the social life of many communities.
Fourth Party System: 1896–1932 (Democratic vs Republican) 1896 saw the beginning of the
Progressive Era. The Republican Party still dominated and the interest groups and voting blocs were unchanged, but the central domestic issues changed to government regulation of railroads and large corporations ("
trusts"), the protective tariff, the role of
labor unions,
child labor, the need for a new banking system, corruption in party politics, primary elections, direct election of senators,
racial segregation, efficiency in government,
women's suffrage, and control of immigration. Some realignment took place, giving Republicans dominance in the industrial Northeast and new strength in the border states. The era began after the Republicans blamed the Democrats for the
Panic of 1893, which later resulted in
William McKinley's victory over
William Jennings Bryan in the
1896 presidential election.
Fifth Party System: 1932–1976 (Democratic vs Republican) The disruption and suffering of the
Great Depression (1929–1939), and the
New Deal programs (1933–39) of Democratic President
Franklin D. Roosevelt designed to deal with it, created a dramatic political shift. The Democrats were now the party of "big government", the dominant party (retaining the presidency until 1952 and controlling both houses of Congress for most of the period from the 1930s to the mid-1990s), The New Deal raised the minimum wage, established
Social Security, and created other federal services. Roosevelt "forged a broad coalition—including small farmers, Northern city dwellers with '
urban political machines', organized labor, European immigrants, Catholics, Jews, African Americans, liberals, intellectuals, and reformers", as well as traditionally Democratic segregationist white Southerners. Opposition Republicans were split between a conservative wing, led by
Ohio Senator
Robert A. Taft, and a more successful moderate wing exemplified by the politics of Northeastern leaders such as
Nelson Rockefeller,
Jacob Javits, and
Henry Cabot Lodge. The latter steadily lost influence inside the GOP after 1964. Civil rights legislation driven by Democratic President
Lyndon B. Johnson, such as the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 and
Voting Rights Act of 1965, along with
Barry Goldwater's 1964 presidential campaign and later President
Richard Nixon's "
Southern strategy", began the breaking of white segregationist
Solid South away from the Democratic Party and their migration towards the Republican Party. Southern white voters started voting for Republican presidential candidates in the 1950s, and Republican state and local candidates in the 1990s.
Sixth Party System: 1980–2016 (Democratic vs Republican) Around 1968, a breakup of the old Democratic Party
New Deal coalition began and American politics became more polarized along ideology. The following decades saw the dissipation of the blurred ideological character of political party coalitions. Previously, there were Democratic elected officials (mostly in the South) who were considerably more conservative than many Republican senators and governors (for example,
Nelson Rockefeller). Even
Jimmy Carter, who ultimately served as a transitional President in the wake of the Nixon scandals, was considered by many at the time to possibly be a closet
boll weevil Democrat. In time, not only did conservative Democrats and liberal Republicans retire, switch parties, or lose elections, so did
centrists (such as
Rudy Giuliani,
George Pataki,
Richard Riordan, and
Arnold Schwarzenegger). Eventually a large nationwide majority of rural and working-class whites became the base of the Republican Party, while the Democratic Party was increasingly made up of a coalition of African Americans, Latinos, and white urban progressives. Whereas college-educated voters had historically skewed heavily towards the Republican party, high educational attainment was increasingly a marker of Democratic support. Together, this formed the political system in the
Reagan Era of the 1980s and beyond. In 1980, conservative Republican
Ronald Reagan defeated incumbent Democratic President
Jimmy Carter on a platform of smaller government and sunny optimism that free trade and tax cuts would stimulate economic growth, which would then "trickle down" to the middle and lower classes (who might not benefit initially from these policies). The Republican Party was now said to rest on "
three legs":
Christian right social conservatism (particularly the anti-abortion movement),
fiscal conservatism and
small government (particularly supporting tax cuts), and strong anti-communist military policy (with increased
willingness to intervene abroad).
Proposed Seventh Party System: 2016?–present (Democratic vs Republican) While there is no consensus that a Seventh Party System has begun, many have noted unique features of a political era starting with the
2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump. During and following the campaign, "Reagan Revolution" rhetoric and policy began to be replaced by new themes in the Republican Party. There was more emphasis on cultural conservatism (opposition not just to abortion, but also gay marriage and transgender lifestyles). Additionally, support for free trade and liberal immigration was replaced by opposition to economic globalization and illegal, undocumented immigration (mostly from non-European countries). Distrust of institutions and loyalty for President Donald Trump became common among Republican voters during this time. Although conservative blue-collar workers migrated to the Republican Party, an upper business class, historically part of the Republican Party since the
Gilded Age, began moving left. Conservative New York Times columnist Ross Douthat has argued that "Today's G.O.P. is most clearly now the party of
local capitalism—the small-business gentry, the family firms", while "much of corporate America has swung culturally into liberalism’s camp. [...] The party’s base regards corporate institutions—especially in Silicon Valley, but extending to more traditional capitalist powers—as cultural enemies". ==Minor parties and independents==