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Sixth Party System

The Sixth Party System is the era in United States politics following the Fifth Party System. As with any periodization, opinions differ on when the Sixth Party System may have begun, with suggested dates ranging from the late 1960s to the Republican Revolution of 1994. Nonetheless, there is agreement among scholars that the Sixth Party System features strong division between the Democratic and Republican parties, which are rooted in socioeconomic class, cultural, religious, educational and racial issues, and debates over the proper role of government.[1]

Sixth Party System

← Fifth 1980–?

United States presidential election results between 1980 and 2020. Blue shaded states usually voted for the Democratic Party, while red shaded states usually voted for the Republican Party.
United States presidential election results from the year 2000 onwards.

Scholarly perspectives edit

The Sixth Party System is characterized by an electoral shift from the electoral coalitions of the Fifth Party System during the New Deal. The Republican Party became the dominant party in the South, rural areas, and suburbs, and its voter base became shaped by White Evangelicals.[2] Meanwhile, the Democratic Party became the dominant party in urban areas, and its voter base diversified to include trade unionists, urban machinists, progressive intellectuals, as well as racial, ethnic, and religious minorities. A critical factor was the major transformation of the political system in the Reagan Era of the 1980s and beyond.[3][4]

No clear disciplinary consensus has emerged pinpointing an electoral event responsible for shifting presidential and congressional control since the Great Depression of the 1930s, when the Fifth Party System emerged. Much of the work published on the subject has come from political scientists explaining the events of their time either as the imminent breakup of the Fifth Party System, and the installation of a new one, or in terms of such transition taking place some time ago. In 2006, Arthur Paulson argued that a decisive realignment took place in the late 1960s. Other current writing on the Fifth Party System expresses admiration of its longevity, as the first four systems lasted about 30 to 40 years each, which would have implied that the early 21st century should see a Seventh Party System.[5] Previous party systems ended with the dominant party losing two consecutive House elections by large margins, and also losing a presidential election coinciding with or immediately following the second House election, which are decisive electoral evidence of political realignment, as it happened in the 1896 election. Such a shift took place between 2006 and 2008 in favor of the Democrats, but the Republicans won the elections of 2010 by their biggest landslide since 1946 and finished the 2014 elections with their greatest number of House seats since 1928.[6]

According to the 2017 edition of The Logic of American Politics, "a sixth party system is now in place." Although the precise starting date is a matter of debate, "the most salient difference between the current and New Deal party systems is the Republican Party's increased strength, exemplified by 20 majorities in the House and Senate in six straight elections (1994–2004), unprecedented since the fourth party system, [its] retaking of the House in 2010 and the Senate in 2014 [...] and its sweeping national victory in 2016."[7]

Writing in 2020, political scientists Mark D. Brewer and L. Sandy Maisel argue "[i]t seems safe to state that the sixth American party system featured strong divisions between Republicans and Democrats, rooted in cleavages based on social class, social and cultural issues, race and ethnicity, and the proper size and scope of the federal government."[1] In Parties and Elections in America: The Electoral Process (2021), Brewer and Maisel argue that the consensus among experts is that the Sixth System is underway based on American electoral politics since the 1960s, stating: "Although most in the field now believe we are in a sixth party system, there is a fair amount of disagreement about how exactly we arrived at this new system and about its particular contours. Scholars do, however, agree that there has been significant change in American electoral politics since the 1960s."[1]

Dating edit

 
United States presidential election results between 1980 and 2004 (One possible span for the Sixth Party System).

Opinions on when the Sixth Party System began include the elections of 1966 to 1968, the election of 1972, the 1980s when both parties began to become more unified and partisan, and the 1990s due to cultural divisions.[8][9][10][11]

Political scientist Stephen C. Craig argues for the 1972 election, when Richard Nixon won a 49-state landslide. He notes that "[t]here seems to be consensus on the appropriate name for the sixth party system. [...] Changes that occurred during the 1960s were so great and so pervasive that they cry out to be called a critical-election period. The new system of candidate-centered parties is so distinct and so portentous that one can no longer deny its existence or its character."[11]

The Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History dates the start in 1980, with the election of Reagan and a Republican Senate.[12] Arthur Paulson argues that "[w]hether electoral change since the 1960s is called 'realignment' or not, the 'sixth party system' emerged between 1964 and 1972."[13]

Possible Seventh Party System edit

 
United States presidential election results between 2008 and 2020 (One possible span for a current Seventh Party System or transitional period). Democrats won the popular vote in all of these elections.

Some scholars and pundits have also posited that the Sixth Party System has ended while the Seventh Party System has not yet begun, and that the current system is merely a unique transition phase between the two. Mark D. Brewer and L. Sandy Maisel speculate that "in the wake of Donald Trump's 2016 presidential victory, there is now strengthening debate as to whether we are entering a new party system as Trump fundamentally reshapes the Republican party and the Democratic party responds and evolves as well."[14] One argument for a Seventh Party System is a shift in demographics and voting patterns. Non-whites, who predominantly vote Democratic, have grown as a share of the population, and previously Republican-leaning secular college-educated whites have moved to the left. At the same time, Republicans have made significant inroads with white voters without a college degree, while holding steady with evangelical voters.[15] Another noteworthy feature of presidential elections in the 21st century is a consistent Democratic lean in the popular vote. Republicans have lost the popular vote in seven out of the last eight presidential elections. The re-election of George W. Bush in 2004 remains the sole Republican popular vote win since 1988, which stands in significant contrast to the Republican victory streak in the late Fifth and early Sixth Party Systems.[16]

Possible dealignment period edit

 
United States presidential election results between 1964 and 1976 (One possible span for a dealignment).

One possible explanation for the lack of an agreed-upon beginning of the Sixth Party System is the brief period of dealignment immediately preceding it. Dealignment is a trend or process whereby a large portion of the electorate abandons its previous partisan affiliation without developing a new one to replace it. Ronald Inglehart and Avram Hochstein identify the time period of the American dealignment as 1958 to 1968.[17] Although the dealignment interpretation remains the consensus view among scholars, a few political scientists argue that partisanship remained so powerful that dealignment was much exaggerated.[18]

Issues edit

Harris and Tichenor argue: "At the level of issues, the sixth party system was characterized by clashes over what rights to extend to various groups in society. The initial manifestations of these clashes were race-based school desegregation and affirmative action, but women's issues, especially abortion rights, soon gained equal billing. [...] To these were added in the 1980s environmental defense and in the 1990s gay rights."[19]

New voter coalitions included the emergence of the "religious right", which is a combination of Catholics and Evangelical Protestants united on opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage. Southern white voters started voting for Republican presidential candidates in the 1950s, and Republican state and local candidates in the 1990s.[20]

Nominating candidates edit

In the chaotic campaign for the Democratic nomination in 1968, Hubert Humphrey won the nomination without entering any primaries. He was selected by state and local party officials. The old system of using county caucuses and state party conventions to pick the delegates largely gave way in 1972 to primaries, thanks to the reforms proposed by the McGovern–Fraser Commission for the Democrats. The Republicans followed suit.[21] One result was that locally powerful politicians lost their power to shape national tickets, and their influence in Washington. The new-style national convention was rarely the site of bargaining and dealing, but instead became a ratification ceremony run by the winner in the primaries.[22]

Campaign finance edit

Even more dramatic was the increase in spending thanks to new fund-raising techniques. The major growth was not in the business or labor sectors, but in the network organizations of political parties, and most particularly the national organizations of state elected and party officials.[23] The U.S. Supreme Court gave decisive support to reducing limits in Citizens United v. FEC (2010). That decision enabled corporations, labor unions, and Super PACs, among others, to advertise as much as they please within 30 days of a primary election or within 60 days of a general election. Two years before the decision, the 2008 presidential election saw spending independent of the parties of $144 million. In the 2012 presidential election, independent spending had soared to over $1 billion.[24] At the state level, the 21st century saw a new electoral arena, with heavy fundraising and spending on advertising in campaigns for justices of state supreme courts.[25] In 2016 and 2020, Bernie Sanders financed presidential campaigns heavily from small-dollar donations generated online.[26]

Since 1980, the only three presidential elections which have been won by the campaign that raised less money have been the campaigns for Ronald Reagan, which in 1980 raised less money than Jimmy Carter's campaign; Bill Clinton, which in 1996 raised less money than Bob Dole's campaign; and Donald Trump, which in 2016 raised less money than Hillary Clinton's campaign.[27][28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Mark D. Brewer and L. Sandy Maisel, Parties and Elections in America: The Electoral Process (9th ed. 2021) p 42 online
  2. ^ Neiheisel, Jacob R. (2021). "Moral Victories in the Battle for Congress: Cultural Conservatism and the House GOP". Political Science Quarterly. 136 (2): 379–380. doi:10.1002/polq.13191. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  3. ^ Sean Wilentz, The Age of Reagan: A History, 1974–2008 (2008)
  4. ^ Robert M. Collins (2009). Transforming America: Politics and Culture During the Reagan Years. Columbia UP. p. 57. ISBN 9780231124010. [The Reagan presidency] produced a political transformation that altered substantially the terms of debate in American politics and public life.
  5. ^ Aldrich (1999).
  6. ^ Sean Sullivan. "McSally win gives GOP historic majority in House". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2014-12-27.
  7. ^ Samuel Kernell; Gary C. Jacobson; Thad Kousser; Lynn Vavreck (2017). The Logic of American Politics, 8th edition. SAGE Publications. p. 21. ISBN 9781506358635.
  8. ^ "What is the sixth party system". 19 May 2011.
  9. ^ "The Sixth Party System in American Politics (1976-2012)". talkelections.org.
  10. ^ Alex Copulsky (July 24, 2013). "Perpetual Crisis and the Sixth Party System".
  11. ^ a b Stephen C. Craig, Broken Contract? Changing Relationships between Americans and Their Government (1996) p. 105
  12. ^ Michael Kazin, et al. eds, The Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History (2009) Vol. 2, pg. 288
  13. ^ Arthur Paulson, "Party change and the shifting dynamics in presidential nominations: The Lessons of 2008." Polity 41.3 (2009): 312-330, quoting page 314.
  14. ^ Brewer and Maisel, Parties and Elections in America: The Electoral Process (9th ed. 2021) p 42 online
  15. ^ Vance, Chris (2021-01-12). "The Seventh Party System - Niskanen Center". Niskanen Center - Improving Policy, Advancing Moderation. Retrieved 2023-12-15.
  16. ^ Stellino, Molly. "Fact check: Last Republican to win popular vote left office 14 years ago, not 30". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  17. ^ Inglehart, Ronald, and Avram Hochstein. "Alignment and Dealignment of the Electorate in France and the United States." Comparative Political Studies 5.3 (1972): 343-372.
  18. ^ Russell J. Dalton (2013). The Apartisan American: Dealignment and Changing Electoral Politics. CQ Press. p. 1. ISBN 9781452216942.
  19. ^ Richard A. Harris; Daniel J. Tichenor (2009). A History of the U.S. Political System: Ideas, Interests, and Institutions. ABC-CLIO. p. 98. ISBN 9781851097180.
  20. ^ J. David Woodard, The New Southern Politics (2006). For a graph of the movement of Southern white voters see Brian F. Schaffner (2010). Politics, Parties, and Elections in America (7th ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 31. ISBN 9780495899167.
  21. ^ Jeffrey S. Walz and John Comer, "State Responses to National Democratic Party Reform," Political Research Quarterly 52.1 (1999): 189-208.
  22. ^ David B. Truman, "Party reform, party atrophy, and constitutional change: Some reflections." Political Science Quarterly 99.4 (1984): 637-655 online
  23. ^ Keith E. Hamm, et al., "Independent spending in state elections, 2006–2010: vertically networked political parties were the real story, not business." The Forum 12#2 (2014) online[dead link]
  24. ^ Wendy L. Hansen, et al. "The effects of Citizens United on corporate spending in the 2012 presidential election." Journal of Politics 77.2 (2015): 535-545. online
  25. ^ Chris W. Bonneau, "Patterns of campaign spending and electoral competition in state supreme court elections." Justice System Journal 25.1 (2004): 21-38.
  26. ^ Anthony Corrado and Molly Corbett, “Rewriting the Playbook on Presidential Campaign Financing,” in Campaigning for President, 2008, edited by Dennis W. Johnson (Routledge, 2009) pp. 126–46
  27. ^ "The Most Expensive Election Ever". Brennan Center for Justice.
  28. ^ Krumholz, Sheila (August 23, 2012). "Will money buy the White House?". CNN.

Further reading edit

  • Aberbach, Joel D., and Gillian Peele, eds. Crisis of Conservatism?: The Republican Party, the Conservative Movement, and American Politics After Bush (2011) excerpt and text search
  • Aldrich, John H. (1999). "Political Parties in a Critical Era". American Politics Research. 27 (1): 9–32. doi:10.1177/1532673X99027001003. S2CID 154209484. speculates on emergence of Seventh Party System
  • Alterman, Eric, and Kevin Mattson. The Cause: The Fight for American Liberalism from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama (2012) biographical approach by liberal experts; excerpt and text search
  • Bibby, John F. "Party Organizations, 1946–1996," in Byron E. Shafer, ed. Partisan Approaches to Postwar American Politics (1998)
  • Brands, H.W. The Strange Death of American Liberalism (2003); a liberal view
  • Brewer, Mark D., and L. Sandy Maisel. Parties and Elections in America: The Electoral Process (9th ed. 2021) pp 42–47 excerpt.
  • Collins, Robert M. Transforming America: Politics and Culture During the Reagan Years, (2007).
  • Critchlow, Donald T. The Conservative Ascendancy: How the Republican Right Rose to Power in Modern America (2nd ed. 2011); a conservative view
  • Ehrman, John. The Eighties: America in the Age of Reagan (2008); a conservative view
  • Hayward, Steven F. The Age of Reagan: The Fall of the Old Liberal Order: 1964–1980 (2009), a conservative interpretation
  • Hayward, Steven F. The Age of Reagan: The Conservative Counterrevolution 1980–1989 (2009) excerpt and text search
  • Jensen, Richard. "The Last Party System: Decay of Consensus, 1932–1980," in The Evolution of American Electoral Systems (Paul Kleppner et al. eds.) (1981) pp. 219–25,
  • Kabaservice, Geoffrey. Rule and Ruin: The Downfall of Moderation and the Destruction of the Republican Party, From Eisenhower to the Tea Party (2012) scholarly history favorable to moderates excerpt and text search
  • Kazin, Michael. What It Took to Win: A History of the Democratic Party (2022)excerpt
  • Martin, William. With God on Our Side: The Rise of the Religious Right in America, (1996)
  • Niemi, Richard G., and John H. Aldrich. "The sixth American party system: Electoral change, 1952–1992." in Broken Contract? (Routledge, 2018) pp. 87-109.
  • Paulson, Arthur. Electoral Realignment and the Outlook for American Democracy (2006)
  • Rauch, Jonathan; La Raja, Raymond J. (December 7, 2017). "Re-engineering politicians: How activist groups choose our candidates—long before we vote". The Brookings Institution.
  • Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr., ed. History of American Presidential Elections, 1789–2008 (2011) 3 vol and 11 vol editions; detailed analysis of each election, with primary documents; online v. 1. 1789-1824 -- v. 2. 1824-1844 -- v. 3. 1848-1868 -- v. 4. 1872-1888 -- v. 5. 1892-1908 -- v. 6. 1912-1924 -- v. 7. 1928-1940 -- v. 8. 1944-1956 -- v. 9. 1960-1968 -- v. 10. 1972-1984 -- v. 11. 1988-2001
  • Shade, William G., and Ballard C. Campbell, eds. American presidential campaigns and elections (Routledge, 2020) .
  • Shafer, Byron E. "Where Are We in History? Political Orders and Political Eras in the Postwar U.S.," The Forum (2007) Vol. 5#3, Article 4. online edition
  • Wilentz, Sean. The Age of Reagan: A History 1974–2008 (2008), by a leading liberal.
  • Zernike, Kate. Boiling Mad: Inside Tea Party America (2010), by a New York Times reporter

sixth, party, system, united, states, politics, following, fifth, party, system, with, periodization, opinions, differ, when, have, begun, with, suggested, dates, ranging, from, late, 1960s, republican, revolution, 1994, nonetheless, there, agreement, among, s. The Sixth Party System is the era in United States politics following the Fifth Party System As with any periodization opinions differ on when the Sixth Party System may have begun with suggested dates ranging from the late 1960s to the Republican Revolution of 1994 Nonetheless there is agreement among scholars that the Sixth Party System features strong division between the Democratic and Republican parties which are rooted in socioeconomic class cultural religious educational and racial issues and debates over the proper role of government 1 Sixth Party System Fifth 1980 United States presidential election results between 1980 and 2020 Blue shaded states usually voted for the Democratic Party while red shaded states usually voted for the Republican Party United States presidential election results from the year 2000 onwards Contents 1 Scholarly perspectives 2 Dating 2 1 Possible Seventh Party System 3 Possible dealignment period 4 Issues 4 1 Nominating candidates 4 2 Campaign finance 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingScholarly perspectives editThe Sixth Party System is characterized by an electoral shift from the electoral coalitions of the Fifth Party System during the New Deal The Republican Party became the dominant party in the South rural areas and suburbs and its voter base became shaped by White Evangelicals 2 Meanwhile the Democratic Party became the dominant party in urban areas and its voter base diversified to include trade unionists urban machinists progressive intellectuals as well as racial ethnic and religious minorities A critical factor was the major transformation of the political system in the Reagan Era of the 1980s and beyond 3 4 No clear disciplinary consensus has emerged pinpointing an electoral event responsible for shifting presidential and congressional control since the Great Depression of the 1930s when the Fifth Party System emerged Much of the work published on the subject has come from political scientists explaining the events of their time either as the imminent breakup of the Fifth Party System and the installation of a new one or in terms of such transition taking place some time ago In 2006 Arthur Paulson argued that a decisive realignment took place in the late 1960s Other current writing on the Fifth Party System expresses admiration of its longevity as the first four systems lasted about 30 to 40 years each which would have implied that the early 21st century should see a Seventh Party System 5 Previous party systems ended with the dominant party losing two consecutive House elections by large margins and also losing a presidential election coinciding with or immediately following the second House election which are decisive electoral evidence of political realignment as it happened in the 1896 election Such a shift took place between 2006 and 2008 in favor of the Democrats but the Republicans won the elections of 2010 by their biggest landslide since 1946 and finished the 2014 elections with their greatest number of House seats since 1928 6 According to the 2017 edition of The Logic of American Politics a sixth party system is now in place Although the precise starting date is a matter of debate the most salient difference between the current and New Deal party systems is the Republican Party s increased strength exemplified by 20 majorities in the House and Senate in six straight elections 1994 2004 unprecedented since the fourth party system its retaking of the House in 2010 and the Senate in 2014 and its sweeping national victory in 2016 7 Writing in 2020 political scientists Mark D Brewer and L Sandy Maisel argue i t seems safe to state that the sixth American party system featured strong divisions between Republicans and Democrats rooted in cleavages based on social class social and cultural issues race and ethnicity and the proper size and scope of the federal government 1 In Parties and Elections in America The Electoral Process 2021 Brewer and Maisel argue that the consensus among experts is that the Sixth System is underway based on American electoral politics since the 1960s stating Although most in the field now believe we are in a sixth party system there is a fair amount of disagreement about how exactly we arrived at this new system and about its particular contours Scholars do however agree that there has been significant change in American electoral politics since the 1960s 1 Dating edit nbsp United States presidential election results between 1980 and 2004 One possible span for the Sixth Party System Opinions on when the Sixth Party System began include the elections of 1966 to 1968 the election of 1972 the 1980s when both parties began to become more unified and partisan and the 1990s due to cultural divisions 8 9 10 11 Political scientist Stephen C Craig argues for the 1972 election when Richard Nixon won a 49 state landslide He notes that t here seems to be consensus on the appropriate name for the sixth party system Changes that occurred during the 1960s were so great and so pervasive that they cry out to be called a critical election period The new system of candidate centered parties is so distinct and so portentous that one can no longer deny its existence or its character 11 The Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History dates the start in 1980 with the election of Reagan and a Republican Senate 12 Arthur Paulson argues that w hether electoral change since the 1960s is called realignment or not the sixth party system emerged between 1964 and 1972 13 Possible Seventh Party System edit nbsp United States presidential election results between 2008 and 2020 One possible span for a current Seventh Party System or transitional period Democrats won the popular vote in all of these elections Some scholars and pundits have also posited that the Sixth Party System has ended while the Seventh Party System has not yet begun and that the current system is merely a unique transition phase between the two Mark D Brewer and L Sandy Maisel speculate that in the wake of Donald Trump s 2016 presidential victory there is now strengthening debate as to whether we are entering a new party system as Trump fundamentally reshapes the Republican party and the Democratic party responds and evolves as well 14 One argument for a Seventh Party System is a shift in demographics and voting patterns Non whites who predominantly vote Democratic have grown as a share of the population and previously Republican leaning secular college educated whites have moved to the left At the same time Republicans have made significant inroads with white voters without a college degree while holding steady with evangelical voters 15 Another noteworthy feature of presidential elections in the 21st century is a consistent Democratic lean in the popular vote Republicans have lost the popular vote in seven out of the last eight presidential elections The re election of George W Bush in 2004 remains the sole Republican popular vote win since 1988 which stands in significant contrast to the Republican victory streak in the late Fifth and early Sixth Party Systems 16 Possible dealignment period edit nbsp United States presidential election results between 1964 and 1976 One possible span for a dealignment One possible explanation for the lack of an agreed upon beginning of the Sixth Party System is the brief period of dealignment immediately preceding it Dealignment is a trend or process whereby a large portion of the electorate abandons its previous partisan affiliation without developing a new one to replace it Ronald Inglehart and Avram Hochstein identify the time period of the American dealignment as 1958 to 1968 17 Although the dealignment interpretation remains the consensus view among scholars a few political scientists argue that partisanship remained so powerful that dealignment was much exaggerated 18 Issues editHarris and Tichenor argue At the level of issues the sixth party system was characterized by clashes over what rights to extend to various groups in society The initial manifestations of these clashes were race based school desegregation and affirmative action but women s issues especially abortion rights soon gained equal billing To these were added in the 1980s environmental defense and in the 1990s gay rights 19 New voter coalitions included the emergence of the religious right which is a combination of Catholics and Evangelical Protestants united on opposition to abortion and same sex marriage Southern white voters started voting for Republican presidential candidates in the 1950s and Republican state and local candidates in the 1990s 20 Nominating candidates edit In the chaotic campaign for the Democratic nomination in 1968 Hubert Humphrey won the nomination without entering any primaries He was selected by state and local party officials The old system of using county caucuses and state party conventions to pick the delegates largely gave way in 1972 to primaries thanks to the reforms proposed by the McGovern Fraser Commission for the Democrats The Republicans followed suit 21 One result was that locally powerful politicians lost their power to shape national tickets and their influence in Washington The new style national convention was rarely the site of bargaining and dealing but instead became a ratification ceremony run by the winner in the primaries 22 Campaign finance edit Even more dramatic was the increase in spending thanks to new fund raising techniques The major growth was not in the business or labor sectors but in the network organizations of political parties and most particularly the national organizations of state elected and party officials 23 The U S Supreme Court gave decisive support to reducing limits in Citizens United v FEC 2010 That decision enabled corporations labor unions and Super PACs among others to advertise as much as they please within 30 days of a primary election or within 60 days of a general election Two years before the decision the 2008 presidential election saw spending independent of the parties of 144 million In the 2012 presidential election independent spending had soared to over 1 billion 24 At the state level the 21st century saw a new electoral arena with heavy fundraising and spending on advertising in campaigns for justices of state supreme courts 25 In 2016 and 2020 Bernie Sanders financed presidential campaigns heavily from small dollar donations generated online 26 Since 1980 the only three presidential elections which have been won by the campaign that raised less money have been the campaigns for Ronald Reagan which in 1980 raised less money than Jimmy Carter s campaign Bill Clinton which in 1996 raised less money than Bob Dole s campaign and Donald Trump which in 2016 raised less money than Hillary Clinton s campaign 27 28 See also editHistory of the Democratic Party United States History of the Republican Party United States Party systems in the United States Political party strength in U S states Politics of the Southern United States Southern StrategyReferences edit a b c Mark D Brewer and L Sandy Maisel Parties and Elections in America The Electoral Process 9th ed 2021 p 42 online Neiheisel Jacob R 2021 Moral Victories in the Battle for Congress Cultural Conservatism and the House GOP Political Science Quarterly 136 2 379 380 doi 10 1002 polq 13191 Retrieved 2024 04 12 Sean Wilentz The Age of Reagan A History 1974 2008 2008 Robert M Collins 2009 Transforming America Politics and Culture During the Reagan Years Columbia UP p 57 ISBN 9780231124010 The Reagan presidency produced a political transformation that altered substantially the terms of debate in American politics and public life Aldrich 1999 Sean Sullivan McSally win gives GOP historic majority in House The Washington Post Retrieved 2014 12 27 Samuel Kernell Gary C Jacobson Thad Kousser Lynn Vavreck 2017 The Logic of American Politics 8th edition SAGE Publications p 21 ISBN 9781506358635 What is the sixth party system 19 May 2011 The Sixth Party System in American Politics 1976 2012 talkelections org Alex Copulsky July 24 2013 Perpetual Crisis and the Sixth Party System a b Stephen C Craig Broken Contract Changing Relationships between Americans and Their Government 1996 p 105 Michael Kazin et al eds The Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History 2009 Vol 2 pg 288 Arthur Paulson Party change and the shifting dynamics in presidential nominations The Lessons of 2008 Polity 41 3 2009 312 330 quoting page 314 Brewer and Maisel Parties and Elections in America The Electoral Process 9th ed 2021 p 42 online Vance Chris 2021 01 12 The Seventh Party System Niskanen Center Niskanen Center Improving Policy Advancing Moderation Retrieved 2023 12 15 Stellino Molly Fact check Last Republican to win popular vote left office 14 years ago not 30 USA TODAY Retrieved 2024 04 12 Inglehart Ronald and Avram Hochstein Alignment and Dealignment of the Electorate in France and the United States Comparative Political Studies 5 3 1972 343 372 Russell J Dalton 2013 The Apartisan American Dealignment and Changing Electoral Politics CQ Press p 1 ISBN 9781452216942 Richard A Harris Daniel J Tichenor 2009 A History of the U S Political System Ideas Interests and Institutions ABC CLIO p 98 ISBN 9781851097180 J David Woodard The New Southern Politics 2006 For a graph of the movement of Southern white voters see Brian F Schaffner 2010 Politics Parties and Elections in America 7th ed Cengage Learning p 31 ISBN 9780495899167 Jeffrey S Walz and John Comer State Responses to National Democratic Party Reform Political Research Quarterly 52 1 1999 189 208 David B Truman Party reform party atrophy and constitutional change Some reflections Political Science Quarterly 99 4 1984 637 655 online Keith E Hamm et al Independent spending in state elections 2006 2010 vertically networked political parties were the real story not business The Forum 12 2 2014 online dead link Wendy L Hansen et al The effects of Citizens United on corporate spending in the 2012 presidential election Journal of Politics 77 2 2015 535 545 online Chris W Bonneau Patterns of campaign spending and electoral competition in state supreme court elections Justice System Journal 25 1 2004 21 38 Anthony Corrado and Molly Corbett Rewriting the Playbook on Presidential Campaign Financing in Campaigning for President 2008 edited by Dennis W Johnson Routledge 2009 pp 126 46 The Most Expensive Election Ever Brennan Center for Justice Krumholz Sheila August 23 2012 Will money buy the White House CNN Further reading editAberbach Joel D and Gillian Peele eds Crisis of Conservatism The Republican Party the Conservative Movement and American Politics After Bush 2011 excerpt and text search Aldrich John H 1999 Political Parties in a Critical Era American Politics Research 27 1 9 32 doi 10 1177 1532673X99027001003 S2CID 154209484 speculates on emergence of Seventh Party System Alterman Eric and Kevin Mattson The Cause The Fight for American Liberalism from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama 2012 biographical approach by liberal experts excerpt and text search Bibby John F Party Organizations 1946 1996 in Byron E Shafer ed Partisan Approaches to Postwar American Politics 1998 Brands H W The Strange Death of American Liberalism 2003 a liberal view Brewer Mark D and L Sandy Maisel Parties and Elections in America The Electoral Process 9th ed 2021 pp 42 47 excerpt Collins Robert M Transforming America Politics and Culture During the Reagan Years 2007 Critchlow Donald T The Conservative Ascendancy How the Republican Right Rose to Power in Modern America 2nd ed 2011 a conservative view Ehrman John The Eighties America in the Age of Reagan 2008 a conservative view Hayward Steven F The Age of Reagan The Fall of the Old Liberal Order 1964 1980 2009 a conservative interpretation Hayward Steven F The Age of Reagan The Conservative Counterrevolution 1980 1989 2009 excerpt and text search Jensen Richard The Last Party System Decay of Consensus 1932 1980 in The Evolution of American Electoral Systems Paul Kleppner et al eds 1981 pp 219 25 Kabaservice Geoffrey Rule and Ruin The Downfall of Moderation and the Destruction of the Republican Party From Eisenhower to the Tea Party 2012 scholarly history favorable to moderates excerpt and text search Kazin Michael What It Took to Win A History of the Democratic Party 2022 excerpt Martin William With God on Our Side The Rise of the Religious Right in America 1996 Niemi Richard G and John H Aldrich The sixth American party system Electoral change 1952 1992 in Broken Contract Routledge 2018 pp 87 109 Paulson Arthur Electoral Realignment and the Outlook for American Democracy 2006 Rauch Jonathan La Raja Raymond J December 7 2017 Re engineering politicians How activist groups choose our candidates long before we vote The Brookings Institution Schlesinger Arthur Jr ed History of American Presidential Elections 1789 2008 2011 3 vol and 11 vol editions detailed analysis of each election with primary documents online v 1 1789 1824 v 2 1824 1844 v 3 1848 1868 v 4 1872 1888 v 5 1892 1908 v 6 1912 1924 v 7 1928 1940 v 8 1944 1956 v 9 1960 1968 v 10 1972 1984 v 11 1988 2001 Shade William G and Ballard C Campbell eds American presidential campaigns and elections Routledge 2020 Shafer Byron E Where Are We in History Political Orders and Political Eras in the Postwar U S The Forum 2007 Vol 5 3 Article 4 online edition Wilentz Sean The Age of Reagan A History 1974 2008 2008 by a leading liberal Zernike Kate Boiling Mad Inside Tea Party America 2010 by a New York Times reporter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sixth Party System amp oldid 1218982817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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