AP U.S. History - Review Packet

Evolution of U.S. Political Parties

The Founders did not foresee nor did they approve of political parties. Political parties, they feared, would formalize factions and lead to concentrated power, corruption, and tyranny. Nevertheless, during the Federalist period, 1789-1800, political parties did form around opposing leaders Alexander Hamilton, a Federalist, and Thomas Jefferson, a Democratic-Republican (often called “Anti-Federalists”, especially by the Federalists). The chart below shows the development of the “two party system”. Note that while the two-party system existed for most of our history, the names and major positions of these parties change over time. Some of the more significant minor parties are also included here.

1790's Federalists “Third” Parties Democratic-Republicans

(Or “Hamiltonians”) (Or "Jeffersonian Republicans")

1796 John Adams -

1800 - Jefferson

1804 - Jefferson

1808 - Madison

1812 - Madison

1816 - Monroe

1820 - National Republicans Monroe

One Party: Era of Good

Good Feelings

1824 John Quincy Adams Jacksonian Democrats

1828 - Andrew Jackson

1832 - Andrew Jackson

1836 - Liberty Van Buren

1840 Whigs

Harrison/Tyler -

1844 - Polk

1848 Taylor/Fillmore Free Soil -

1852 - Pierce

1856 - Republican Buchanan

1860 Republican (true two-party system now firmly established) S. Democrats N. Democrats Lincoln - -

1864 Lincoln /Johnson(a Democrat) - -

1868 Grant - -

1872 Grant - -

1876 Hayes Democrats

1880 Garfield/Arthur -

1884 - Cleveland

1888 Harrison -.

1892 - Populist Cleveland

1896 McKinley Socialist

1900 McKinley/T. Roosevelt -

1904 T. Roosevelt -

1908 Taft -

1912 - Progressive (Bull Moose)¹ Wilson

1916 - Communist Socialist Wilson

1920 Harding/Coolidge -

1924 Coolidge -

1928 Hoover -

Republican “Third” Parties Democrat

1932 - F. D. Roosevelt

1936 - F. D. Roosevelt

1940 - F. D. Roosevelt

1944 - F. D. Roosevelt/Truman

1948 - States' Rights (Dixiecrats)² Truman

1952 Eisenhower -

1956 Eisenhower -

1960 - Kennedy/Johnson

1964 - Johnson

1968 Nixon -

1972 Nixon/Ford -

1976 - Carter

1980 Reagan Citizens -

1984 Reagan -

1988 Bush -

1992 - Clinton

1996 - Reform³ Green Clinton

2000 G. W. Bush -

2004 G. W. Bush -

2008 - Obama

¹Unhappy with Taft, Roosevelt loses an attempt at regaining the Republican presidential nomination to Taft. Within days, he and other progressives form the Bull Moose Party, creating, in a sense, four parties: progressive Democrats, conservative Democrats, stand-pat Republicans, and progressive Republicans. With the Republican and Bull Moose Party splitting the vote, Democrat Woodrow Wilson is elected president with 42 percent. A fourth candidate, Socialist Eugene Debs, gets 6 percent.

²Dixiecrats revolted from the Democratic Party due to Truman's support for civil rights. Meeting in Birmingham, Alabama, they nominated South Carolina governor Strom Thurmond as their candidate for president. In the November election, Thurmond carried four states: Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina. He received well over a million popular votes, and his thirty-nine electoral votes represented more than 7 percent of the total.

³H. Ross Perot, Texas billionaire, ran independently for the Presidency. Although he received no electoral votes, he did receive more than 19 million popular votes, the largest percentage for a "third party" candidate since Teddy Roosevelt ran as the Bull Moose candidate in 1912. The movement spawned by his candidacy has developed into a "Reform" Party, but has no clear vision other than to "throw the rascals out."