Political parties in the United States lists political parties in the United States.
Introduction
Legally, the
United States has a
multi-party system. However, in practice, since the mid 1800s, the United States has had a
two-party system with occasional inlets made by third parties. This is largely due to the fact that the United States does not have a
parliamentary system; it may also be a consequence of the
first-past-the-post election system and restrictive
ballot access laws imposed on the other political parties. There have been many political parties other than the two dominant ones, but most third parties are generally considered to be of only minor and short-lived political significance.
Notwithstanding the general perception, many third parties throughout U.S. history have achieved regional success and some (notably the Prohibition Party and the Socialist Party) have had major portions of their platforms incorporated into the platforms of the “major parties.”
Categorizing U.S. political parties
For the purposes of this article, the political parties are grouped into four sections. The first section is “Current major parties”, as the term is defined above. The second section is called “Current third parties” and it consists of those parties that have achieved (or, in the lead-up to an election, are reasonably expected to achieve) ballot status for their respective candidates for
President of the United States in states with enough
electoral votes to have a theoretical chance of winning. The third section is called “Current minor and regional parties that have endorsed candidates” and consists of all the other currently active parties which have candidates (so-called “political parties” with candidates listed). The last section, “Historical political parties”, is for political parties that are defunct.
An alternate means for categorizing U.S. political parties, historically and currently, is to apply the Federal Election Commission's definition of "national committees" retroactively back in time to the beginning of the U.S. To see such a list, see Richard Winger's article in the Election Law Journal, April 2006 (Vol. 5 no. 2), which can be read on-line at http://www.liebertonline.com/loi/elj. Within that article, the list of parties is in Appendix A.
Current major parties
See also:
Current third parties
Each of these non-major parties had
ballot status for its presidential candidate in states with enough
electoral votes to have had a theoretical chance of winning the
2004 presidential election.
See also:
Current minor and regional parties that have endorsed candidates
These parties do not have ballot status for their presidential candidate in enough states to have a theoretical chance to win. Some do not have presidential candidates at all, but do have candidates for other offices.
Historical political parties
- NOTE: The following list of historical parties report only parties that are no longer functioning entities. Some of the parties still in existence were also major players in the below mentioned party systems.
Progressive Era/Fourth Party System (1896–1932)
New Deal/Fifth Party System (1932–1964)
Later 20th century
See also
Other lists
External links
Further reading
Lists of political parties | Political parties in the United States | United States regional and state political parties
Liste der politischen Parteien der Vereinigten Staaten | Κατάλογος Πολιτικών Κομμάτων των Ηνωμένων Πολιτειών | Partis politiques des États-Unis d'Amérique | アメリカの政党 | Partie polityczne Stanów Zjednoczonych | Lista de partidos políticos nos Estados Unidos da América | Lista över politiska partier i USA