Much of the contents of this page were merged with Non-partisan_democracy.
A nonpartisan government is one with no official political parties. The government is called nonpartisan if
A nonpartisan system differs from a single-party system in that the governing faction identifies itself as a party. A single-party government sometimes requires government officials to be members of the party, agree to a particular ideology, and may enforce its control over the government by making all other parties illegal. Members of a nonpartisan government may not share any ideologies. Various communist nations such as China or Cuba are single-party nations. Very few national governments are nonpartisan.
A direct democracy is usually nonpartisan since citizens vote on laws themselves rather than electing representatives.
Unless there are legal prohibitions against political parties, factions within nonpartisan governments generally evolve into political parties.
An absolute monarchy, such as Saudi Arabia, with no legislative branch, is not considered partisan or nonpartisan.
Nonpartisan elections are generally held for municipal and county offices, especially school board, and are also common in the election of judges. In some nonpartisan elections, it is common knowledge which candidates are members of and backed by which parties; in others, parties are almost wholly uninvolved and voters make choices with little or no regard to partisan considerations.
Two Swiss Cantons are also nonpartisan, direct democracies.
Historians have frequently interpreted Federalist No. 10 to imply that the Founding Fathers of the United States intended the government to be nonpartisan. James Madison defined a faction as "a number of citizens, whether amounting to a minority or majority of the whole, who are united and actuated by some common impulse of passion, or of interest, adverse to the rights of other citizens, or to the permanent and aggregate interests of the community." As political parties had interests which were adverse to the rights of citizens and to the general welfare of the nation, several Founding Fathers preferred a nonpartisan form of government.
The administration of George Washington and the first few sessions of the US Congress were nonpartisan. Factions within the early US government coalesced into the Federalist and Democratic-Republican parties. The Era of Good Feeling, when the Federalist party collapsed, leaving the Democratic-Republican party as the sole political faction, was the United States only experience with a single-party system.
The Non-Partisan League was an influential socialist political movement, especially in the Upper Midwest, particularly during the 1910s and 1920s. It also contributed much to the ideology of the former Progressive Party of Canada. It went into decline and merged with the Democratic Party of North Dakota in 1956.
Elections | Political parties | Forms of government | Government
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