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The Rise and Fall of Political Parties in America


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If there is one thing about politics that unites Americans these days, it is their contempt for political parties and partisanship. More Americans today identify as independents than with either of the two major political parties. Citizens boast that they “vote for the person, not for the party,” and denounce fellow citizens or representatives who blindly toe the party line. Party leaders in Congress are held in disrepute, criticized by one side for being too soft and condemned by the other for being too partisan. Insurgent, outsider candidates are increasingly successful against those who are perceived as “the establishment.” Americans are bipartisan in their condemnation of partisanship. ....

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The Missouri Compromise


The Missouri Compromise
Sandy Jordan
Compromising in the legislature is a lost art. People have forgotten how to lay aside their personal agendas for the good of the people. There is no compromising today. Without compromise, Missouri would not be celebrating this milestone we’ve reached.
In 1803 The Louisiana Purchase was made by President Thomas Jefferson. Missouri was a part of Indiana until after the War of 1812. This state was ideal for growing hemp, this was the initial cash crop. Rope manufacturing was a thriving industry. Cotton came later, after the invention of the cotton gin.
On February 13th, 1819 the bill for Missouri statehood was introduced. President Monroe was in power. His presidency was the era of Good Feelings and party “amalgamation . Definition of amalgamation: the action or process of uniting or merging two or more things. ....

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When we stop agreeing on ideals we will forever move away from any 'era of good


A decade following America’s victory over the British in the War of 1812, running from 1815 until 1825, is known as “The Era of Good Feelings.” Americans found little to disagree about, the existing political parties atrophied, and the once powerful Federalist party of George Washington vanished. President James Monroe, elected in 1816, announced that it was his intent not to reconcile Federalists and his own Democrat-Republicans but to exterminate both parties as threats to democracy. He was re-elected unopposed in 1820.
That unanimity is hard to imagine today. The foremost reason is the lust for power. In the early 1800s the federal government was a small, poorly financed institution, its authority severely constrained by the Constitution and considered inferior to that of the states. Today the federal government is playing with over $6 trillion a year, an unimaginable treasure trove that Democrats and Republicans struggle to control. The U.S. government freely dictate ....

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Whither go the unsettled Republicans?


Also a complete waste of time.
One of the notions that has been tossed around promiscuously in recent months involves restoring America to the concepts on which it was built. The truth is that the American political system was built to have two parties — not more. Though, as I will argue later, we might be better off with fewer, like none at all.
That, of course, is what the founders wanted: no parties at all. There never has been an introductory course on American government that did not include the reading of Federalist No. 10, which talks about factions, “united and actuated by some common impulse of passion, or of interest, adversed to the rights of other citizens” — a long way of describing political parties. James Madison, who wrote this entry, deplored factions, and in fact the Era of Good Feelings, which excluded parties, might be thought of to have begun in the last year of the Madison presidency. ....

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