Report Outline
Coming Election and the Two-Party System
American Party Changes and Party Rivalry
Future of the American Two-Party System
Special Focus
Coming Election and the Two-Party System
Republican View of Threats to Two-Party System
If The Voters decree in November that control of the federal government shall be transferred from Democratic to Republican hands, the victors in the contest will consider that their success at the polls has removed a grave threat to survival of the American two-party system. Republican leaders have been warning the nation that the 1952 election may determine the fate of that system in the United States. They fear that if the Democrats, already in power for 20 years, are kept in office any longer, they will become so firmly entrenched that it will be impossible to dislodge them, organized political opposition will fade away, and the country will be saddled with one-party rule and its attendant evils. Republicans accordingly contend that a turnover is necessary, if for no other reason, to revivify the two-party system and assure preservation of the benefits and safeguards inherent in political competition and in the occasional shifting of power from one party to another.
Gen. Eisenhower, opening his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination, declared at Abilene, Kans., June 4 that “a genuine two-party system” was “essential to America's political health today”. He said that “No other device in our particular form of government can be so effective in preserving the best of the past, in testing the new of the present, in deciding upon the possible of the future”. Reverting to the same theme at Dallas on June 21, Eisenhower added: “I am convinced that if the Republican party should not win, we should see the end or risk the end of the two-party system in the United States—a system that is vital to us. But it is no more than an empty phrase when any party remains too long in power. That point we have now reached”.
Although former President Hoover did not refer specifically to the two-party system in his address at the Republican national convention in Chicago on July 8, he told the delegates that “This election may well be the last chance for the survival of freedom in America”. Earlier the same day Sen. Kem (R., Mo.) asserted before the convention: “The very structure of our government is threatened. The two-party system, which is its foundation, is in danger. Our country must not be delivered over to the ruthless rule of a single party”. |
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May 26, 2023 |
Congressional Investigations |
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Jan. 06, 2023 |
Dark Money |
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Mar. 25, 2022 |
The Democrats' Future |
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Apr. 30, 2021 |
The GOP's Future |
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Oct. 13, 2017 |
Future of the Democratic Party |
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Sep. 09, 2016 |
Populism and Party Politics |
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Nov. 14, 2014 |
Nonprofit Groups and Partisan Politics |
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Oct. 24, 2014 |
Future of the GOP |
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Feb. 28, 2014 |
Polarization in America |
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Mar. 19, 2010 |
Tea Party Movement  |
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Mar. 20, 2009 |
Future of the GOP |
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Jun. 08, 2007 |
Democrats in Congress |
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Apr. 30, 2004 |
The Partisan Divide |
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Dec. 22, 1995 |
Third-Party Prospects |
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Jan. 11, 1985 |
Post-1984 Political Landscape |
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Nov. 09, 1984 |
Democratic Revival in South America |
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Sep. 14, 1984 |
Election 1984 |
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Dec. 19, 1980 |
Future of the Democratic Party |
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Sep. 29, 1978 |
New Right in American Politics |
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Jan. 04, 1974 |
Future of Conservatism |
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May 03, 1972 |
The New Populism |
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Feb. 02, 1956 |
Foreign Policy in Political Campaigns |
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Dec. 22, 1954 |
Divided Government |
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Aug. 04, 1952 |
Two-Party System |
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Jun. 06, 1952 |
Party Platforms |
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Sep. 05, 1951 |
Southern Democrats and the 1952 Election |
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Oct. 06, 1948 |
Voting in 1948 |
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Aug. 27, 1948 |
Republicans and Foreign Policy |
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Jul. 16, 1947 |
Third Party Movements |
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Aug. 22, 1940 |
Political Realignments |
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Jan. 13, 1938 |
The G. O. P. and the Solid South |
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Jul. 22, 1936 |
Third Party Movements in American Politics |
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Jul. 07, 1936 |
The Monopoly Issue in Party Politics |
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Nov. 12, 1935 |
Party Platforms and the 1936 Campaign |
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May 18, 1934 |
Political Trends and New Party Movements |
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Jan. 13, 1932 |
National Party Platforms, 1832–1932 |
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May 16, 1928 |
Third Party Movements |
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Jan. 21, 1928 |
Major Party Platforms 1924–1928 |
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Nov. 14, 1924 |
The Election and the Third Party |
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Sep. 05, 1924 |
Party Claims and Past Political Complexion of the States |
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Jun. 25, 1924 |
Third Party Platforms |
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Jun. 18, 1924 |
Thrid Parties: Past and Prospective |
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