Role of the Ongoing Party Battles

Chapter 9 discusses political parties and goes into depth about the role of a two-party system, the histories of the parties, and the function of parties today. The roles of political parties in democracy are keeping elected officials responsible, stimulating political interest, ensuring accountability, helping people make sense of the complexity of politics, and making the government work. Let’s examine how successful the parties are in completing a few of their expected roles.

Over the years, a lot of promises had been kept by elected presidents. According to Five Thirty Eight, from 1968-2004 promises kept range from 52%-80%, which produced an average of 67%. I am personally surprised, because presidents make many promises, and if there is a divided government, it is even more difficult to get legislation passed. However, this proves that the government is doing a good job with keeping their promise, and political parties are there to help do that, because politicians can’t let their parties down. The likelihood that the party will be elected for the next year, or that specific candidate is up for reelection, relies on the success of the president preceding it, so it must live up to their promises. This is another role of political parties: ensuring accountability. Citizens also know exactly who to hold accountable under this. This is not as successful as responsibility of elected officials, which can be seen because the political parties switch very often. However, from 1933-1968, the government must have been very accountable because democrats dominated in the New Deal Era, but for the past 30 or so years, it has been a regular switch between parties.

The next role of political parties is to stimulate political interest. This is important because it increases participation, which is a key condition of popular sovereignty. In addition, having parties makes it easier for people to get information. If you know about the stance of an issue of a certain party, than the opposite is the stance of the other party, so this provides a shortcut to better inform our society, which falls under helping people make sense of the complexity of politics. According to the Pew Research Center, people really do not know much about politics. This again affects our popular sovereignty because we need sound information in order to make good judgements. This emphasizes the failure of this role, because the people aren’t getting what they need. Government is supposed to represent the needs of the people.

It is interesting that it is possible to judge these roles, because the last one is simply to make government work. The existence of parties helps different branches work together, which can be proved as being more efficient for our politics, since united government does so much more in terms on passing bills. So, government does work in making government work.

Overall, political parties stimulate Washington D.C. They help our government and our democracy grow and provide more opportunities to politicians and the citizens on the United States. They do pretty well on most of their roles, but there is always room for improvement. 

https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/trust-us-politicians-keep-most-of-their-promises/http://www.pewresearch.org/2010/11/18/public-knows-basic-facts-about-politics-economics-but-struggles-with-specifics/

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