To
what extent do the Republican party and Democrat party have similarities?
Economy à taxation
| 
Traditional
  ideology | 
Similarities | 
Differences | 
| 
Republicans:
  small government 
Democrats: | 
In the 2012 Party Platform, 56% of republicans
  opposed raising taxes on those who earned over $250,000 
February 2014, Republicans proposed a tax reform, would
  also make up for any revenue losses from decreased income taxes with
  additional taxes and fees for investment managers, big banks, and the highest
  earners. 
35 percent, just
  about the highest in the industrialized world. Republicans want to slash that
  rate down to 25 percent, while Obama proposed cutting it to 28 percent in a
  draft discussion on tax reform in 2012 | 
Want a full repeal of the death tax (also known as
  the federal estate tax, under which a tax is applied to the transfer of the
  deceased’s estate at the time of their death). 
February 2013, Republicans proposed a tax reform, included
  just three income tax brackets, 10 percent, 20 percent, and 35 percent, which
  would reduce income tax rates overall 
July 2014, Obama proposed tax reforms that were
  rejected by Republicans Senator Mitch McConnell from Kentucky- ‘The tax
  hike it includes is going to dampen any boost businesses might otherwise get
  to help our economy’ | 
Economy à welfare
Economy à minimum
wage
| 
Ideology | 
Similarities | 
Differences | 
| 
Republicans believe that wages should be based on
  skill, education, and the law of supply and demand | 
Romney - “I…part company with many of the
  conservatives in my party on the issue of the minimum wage. I think we ought
  to raise it,” Romney has said. “Because frankly, our party is all about more
  jobs and better pay.” While he does not believe in a large increase such as
  the one being proposed at this time, he believes in raising the minimum wage
  to account for inflation on a regular basis. | 
In President Obama’s 2013 State of the Union
  address, he called to increase the minimum wage. In response to this, Senator
  Tom Harkin and Representative George Miller have introduced the Fair Minimum
  Wage Act of 2013. This act would raise the federal minimum wage from the
  current $7.25 to $10.10 over the course of the next two years – Republican
  controlled house voted unanimously against it 
Rubio and Paul Ryan have spoken out against it | 
Health care
| 
Ideology | 
Similarities | 
Differences
   | 
| 
Rep believe that a health care system that is run by
  the government will reduce both the efficiency and the standard of care, as
  well as compromise the patient-physician relationship, and increase waiting
  periods within the health care system | 
Twelve Democrats sided with Republicans in approving
  the first Affordable Care Act-related legislation of the new Congress.  | 
The Republican Party thought the expansion of
  Medicaid is unsustainable, and will harm the nation as a whole. The Affordable
  Care Act (increased Medicaid and made a website that would allow citizens to
  compare insurance providers) -  was so
  firmly opposed by the Republican Party that not a single Republican voted for
  the final version that Obama signed into law. 
The House voted Thursday to curb a provision in
  ObamaCare that some lawmakers say is hurting the job market, as the new
  Republican-controlled Congress moved quickly to challenge the administration
  on several fronts.  
The House voted 252-172 for the ObamaCare bill, which
  tweaks the law's definition of full-time workers who must be offered
  employer-provided health care.  
The bill changes the full-time worker threshold from 30
  hours weekly to a 40-hour minimum 
16 day
  Shutdown over ACA October | 
Immigration
| 
Ideology | 
Similarities | 
Differences | 
| 
Republicans
  believe in warmly welcoming those who enter the country through legal
  methods, while devoting extra resources to keep out those who try to enter
  via illegal methods, as well as keeping track of those who enter and when
  they leave. The party believes that amnesty towards those who have broken
  immigration laws only encourages future immigrants to enter the country
  illegally rather than legally. | 
The plan, which is scheduled to be voted on by
  the House next week, is unlikely to get approval from the more moderate
  Senate – wishing to get Hispanic vote 
 over the past six
  years, deportations of criminals are up 80 percent. | 
House Republicans on Friday 9/1/15 announced
  budget proposal that would fund the Department of Homeland Security, which
  oversees border checkpoints, but block the White House's recent executive
  action benefiting some illegal immigrants.  
NATIVISTS most against Obama’s executive order
  which granted 5million aliens chance to work. | 
Foreign Affairs – war on terror dominating
| 
Ideology | 
Similarities | 
Differences | 
|  | 
US led
  air strike. Was  
 Some 350 US troops are stationed at the base, deep in ISIS
  territory, and officials have often presented attacks on ISIS near the area
  as “self-defense.” 
Each have condemned attacks in Paris and Australia | 
During an
  interview with Fox News, McCain criticised what he called President Barack
  Obama and his administration's "lack of strategy" concerning ISIS | 
Race/Affirmative action
Abortion
| 
Ideology | 
Similarities | 
Differences | 
| 
unborn child has a “fundamental individual
  right to life which cannot be infringed, | 
-         
  Republicans
  for planned parenthood 
-         
  Republicans
  for choice – Super PAC. Members include Senator Susan Collins Maine | 
Republicans
  support a constitutional
  amendment which will end abortion entirely. They oppose using public revenues
  to promote or carry out abortions, and also oppose any health care options
  that include the coverage of abortion.  | 
Gun control
| 
Ideology | 
Similarities | 
Differences
   | 
| 
Both
  believe in right to bear arms |  | 
Democrats
  believe in stronger background checks | 
TO WHAT EXTENT ARE THE REPUBLICANS A DIVIDED PARTY?
Immigration
| 
United | 
Divided | 
| 
-         
  All
  staunchly oppose Obama’s immigration bill. Mitch McConnell, the Republican Senate leader, said Mr
  Obama's unilateral actions ignored the American people | 
-         
  Mr McConnell has
  ruled out triggering a government shutdown by refusing to vote for funds to
  keep federal departments working. But Mr Cruz and others on the Right have
  kept open the possibility of a shutdown, saying Republicans should "use
  any and all means necessary" to oppose the plan. 
-         
    | 
Health care
| 
United | 
Divided | 
| 
Most
  Republicans are anti-Obama Care, as seen by not a single Republican voting
  for the version of the ACA that Obama signed | 
While most fiscal
  and social conservatives oppose any changes to ObamaCare, insisting that the
  entire law should be repealed, other moderate Republicans say the party
  should eliminate the more damaging parts of the law, such as the requirement
  that some businesses provide healthcare to all employees working at least 30
  hours a week.  
GOP leaders have
  promised to hold a vote on repealing ObamaCare, though Senate Majority Leader
  Mitch McConnell (R- 
Ky.) has
  acknowledged the bill would be a dead letter 
Nativists | 
Party leadership
| 
United | 
Divided | 
| 
-         
  In
  the end they chose Bohneor anyway | 
-         
  two dozen of his own members refused to support
  Boehner – House leader- reelection as House speaker in a televised vote à Fiscal
  conservatives and TEA party two factions particularly against him. Thought he
  was too moderate. 2 years ago it was just 1 dozen 
According to the
  poll, 53 percent want neither McConnel as Senate leader or Boehner would
  prefer to see new party leadership. | 
Tax
| 
United | 
Divided  | 
| 
- Want to
  establish tax reform | 
-Don’t
  know when to pursue tax reform – should they do half now, leaving rest to
  2016 or push through all now? | 
Welfare
| 
United | 
Divided  | 
| 
-         
  Republican
  policy on welfare is identical to the conservative view, as can be seen
  through the force they have exerted in pushing through large welfare cuts
  since 2012, causing welfare spending to contract from $571 billion to $541
  billion. In July 2014, the Republicans also pressured Congress to cut food
  stamp spending by 1% in a bipartisan compromise in order to pass agriculture
  legislation. Whilst the spending cut was not as high as Republicans wished
  for, the cut was still significant considering 1 in 7 Americans require food
  stamps | 
-         
    | 
Abortion
| 
United  | 
Divided | 
| 
Republicans
  support a constitutional
  amendment which will end abortion entirely. They oppose using public revenues
  to promote or carry out abortions, and also oppose any health care options
  that include the coverage of abortion | 
-         
  Republicans
  for planned parenthood 
Republicans
  for choice – Super PAC. Members include Senator Susan Collins Maine | 
ARE THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY DIVIDED?
| 
United  | 
Divided | 
| 
·        
  The number of Blue Dog Democrats is in serious
  decline, with just 14 members, after the 2012 elections. | 
·        
    | 
TO WHAT EXTENT IS IT TRUE THAT THERE HAS BEEN A RESURGENCE
IN THE IMPORTANCE OF US PARTIES IN RECENT YEARS?
| 
Increased
  importance | 
Less
  important | 
| 
Evidence of
  partisanship and the increasing polarisation of the parties in recent years. With
  the media’s focus on the deeply partisan approach by both parties to key
  issues such as the economy, it is clear that parties are still dominant in
  the USA. There is clear evidence of adversarial and partisan politics in the
  USA with the Republicans being largely ideologically conservative while their
  Democratic counterparts have adopted a more liberally progressive agenda. | 
·        
  The media allows for more candidate-centred
  politics that focuses on individual media personalities. Similarly, the rise
  of new media and social networking sites has provided a vehicle through which
  individual candidates can reach out to the electorate or raise funds
  directly. | 
| 
Parties still play
  an important role in
  funding and organising electoral campaigns, despite the decline
  in soft money, that is centred on both the Democratic and Republican National
  Committees. | 
·        
  Campaign finance reforms such as the 2002 BCRA
  have placed limits on party fundraising and expenditure while Supreme Court
  decisions such as the Citizens United case
  have increased the power of pressure groups to fund the campaigns of
  individual candidates. | 
| 
Congressional elections have become increasingly focused
  on parties and dominated by national issues such as the 1994 Contract with
  America (a nationally-agreed manifesto, established in the run-up
  to the 1994 midterms, that committed Republican Party members to vote on a
  series of conservative issues such as cutting taxes and balancing the budget)
  and. the
  Democrats’ ‘6 for ‘06’ commitments and the
  most recent Republican Pledge to America, in 2010.  (list of proposed legislation republican
  party hoped to impose in 112th congress) | 
·        
  Primaries are by their nature deeply divisive
  and encourage rifts to form between individuals and factions within the party. | 
| 
·        
  The introduction of
  unpledged superdelegates and party control over the timetabling and nomination
  procedures has allowed them to try to recapture the presidential nomination
  process. I.E. frontloading | 
·        
  The increasing use of primaries in selecting
  candidates has meant candidates are more concerned with direct appeals to the
  electorate and the party leadership is given less power to choose candidates
  and shape the direction of the party. | 
| 
·        
    | 
·        
  Pressure groups have replaced parties in
  communicating with the electorate, mobilising voters and developing policy. | 
PRESSURE GROUPS
How and why do PG influence the Supreme Court?
| 
How | 
Why | 
| 
Providing support in test cases 
Provide
  lawyers and financial aid  
-         
  I.E.
  Windsor Vs Doma case was funded by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
  – case struck down part of the 1996 Defence of Marriage Act (DOMA), under
  which the federal government was barred from providing benefits (such as tax
  concessions) to same-sex couples who had been able to marry in the limited
  number of states or countries that came to permit it 
-         
  The
  case built on the constitutional right to engage in gay relationships that
  had been established in Lawrence v Texas (2003)  | 
SC has power of Judicial review 
Judicial
  review is power of SC to declare acts of congress or actions of the executive
  / state governments unconstitutional and thereby null and void. It therefore
  acts as a guarantor of civil rights and liberties. Pressure groups want to
  influence the Supreme Court to interpret legislation in their favour, so that
  the rights that they want to give citizens, are given.  | 
| 
Influencing judicial appointments 
They
  create profiles on possible appointments, checking their past record to see
  if they have voted in line with the issue of the pressure group advocates.
  They then campaign publically on their most favoured justice. As it is the
  senate that confirm appointments, they lobby senators to try and ensure they
  vote in favour of the preferred candidate.  
I.E: Coalition
  for Constitutional Values was broadcasting adverts to try and get Sonia
  Sottomayor appointed  a coalition for constitutional values
  = of organizations and advocates working together to ensure that our federal
  courts work to the benefit of all Americans in keeping with the core
  constitutional values of liberty, equality and justice for all. | 
Judicial Philosophies 
The
  outcome of court cases = very much dependent on the views and experiences of
  the justices. The more right wing ones, more likely to be anti-abortion etc.
  Sonia Sotomayor in this case, is of Hispanic origin and has more progressive
  views. Important that pressure groups manage to influence SC appointments so
  that  | 
| 
Amicus Curiae Briefs (friends of the court) 
These are
  dossiers created by PG’s to be read by the judges of test cases. They explain
  the view of the Pressure Group. I.E: 2012 Blackhorse vs Pro-football case –
  National Congress of American Indians wrote an Amicus Curiae Bried explaining
  why the ‘Washington Redskins’ name and logo was offensive to Native
  Americans.  | 
Wider views 
So that
  the judiciary can make a more well informed decision on certain issues. They
  will be able to take into account more opinions and thereby better represent
  the views of the public in their rulings.  | 
| 
Writing in journals and published law books 
Leading
  lawyers, some funded by pressure groups, others simply members of pressure
  groups, have written in respected law journals in support of the issue their
  pressure group advocates. I.E. The NRA has written profusely in law books | 
SC justice views evolve 
SC
  justices often read law journals, and future ones will be reading them as
  part of their study. With views of lawyers, their own opinions will be
  shaped.  | 
How and why do PG influence Senate
| 
How | 
Why | 
| 
Lobbying 
Pressure
  Groups try to convince congressmen to have their same philosophy ad vote I
  their same way. They therefore hire progressional lobbyist groups to do so.  
In 2014,
  $2.41 billion was spent on lobbying.  
I.E.
  Facebook, Google, Apple and other technology firms are attempting to lobby
  congress through the Electronic Frontier Foundation in order to get senate to
  pass the Freedom Act which would limit the US’ NSA surveillance and limit
  bulk email collection | 
Senate has ability to pass legislation 
So
  crucial because this effects the everyday lives of every American.
  Legislation revolves around all and any sort of issue.  | 
| 
Endorsement – Super PAC 
Greater
  funds that a candidate allows them to increase their publicity through
  advertising, which usually equates in greater votes. 
As of
  January 11, 2015, 1,287 groups organized as Super PACs have total independent
  expenditures of $344,172,141 in the 2014 cycle | 
PG’s try to endorse candidates so that they
  get elected into Senate. 
I.E.
  Agriculture Super PACs donated $43640 to Senator Marco Rubio | 
| 
Publishing Voting Records 
Emily’s
  List – a pro choice pressure group publishes voting list of who they
  recommend you should vote. – i.e. Ann Kirk Patrick, House of Arizona.  | 
To ensure that right candidate with similar views
  gets elected 
Senate
  confirms judicial and federal appointments so this is particularly important | 
| 
Forming Iron Triangles and through Revolving
  Door Syndrome 
Iron
  triangles – involves a three-sided relationship between a congressional comittee,
  a federal dept  and a particular
  interest group or industry. In forging these strong ties they create a wall
  of resistance to change that the White House may be unable to breach. I.E.  
·        
  Environmentalist
  group the Sierra club had formed strong links with Senate Environment and Public Works Committee and Bureau
  of Land Management (BLM) which caused suspension of keystone pipeline bill
  that would have enabled increased oil supply from US oil reserves | 
Ratify treaties and pass legislation | 
How and why do PG influence House
| 
How | 
Why | 
| 
Lobbying 
Pressure
  Groups try to convince congressmen to have their same philosophy ad vote I
  their same way. They therefore hire progressional lobbyist groups to do so.  
In 2014,
  $2.41 billion was spent on lobbying.  
I.E.
  Facebook, Google, Apple and other technology firms are attempting to lobby
  congress through the Electronic Frontier Foundation in order to get senate to
  pass the Freedom Act which would limit the US’ NSA surveillance and limit
  bulk email collection | 
House has ability to pass legislation 
So
  crucial because this effects the everyday lives of every American.
  Legislation revolves around all and any sort of issue.  | 
| 
Endorsement – Super PAC 
Greater
  funds that a candidate allows them to increase their publicity through advertising,
  which usually equates in greater votes. 
As of
  January 11, 2015, 1,287 groups organized as Super PACs have total independent
  expenditures of $344,172,141 in the 2014 cycle | 
PG’s try to endorse candidates so that they
  get elected into Senate. 
I.E.
  Newly elected representative Alma Adams received most money from EMILY’s list
  - $17,001 | 
| 
Publishing Voting Records 
Emily’s
  List – a pro choice pressure group publishes voting list of who they
  recommend you should vote. – i.e. Ann Kirk Patrick, House of Arizona.  | 
To ensure that right candidate with similar
  views gets elected 
House
  initiates money bills so particularly important  | 
| 
Forming Iron Triangles and through Revolving
  Door Syndrome 
Iron
  triangles – involves a three-sided relationship between a congressional
  comittee, a federal dept  and a
  particular interest group or industry. In forging these strong ties they
  create a wall of resistance to change that the White House may be unable to
  breach. I.E.  
·        
  Environmentalist
  group the Sierra club had formed strong links with House Natural resources
  committee and Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
  which caused suspension of keystone pipeline bill that would have enabled
  increased oil supply from US oil reserves | 
House can impeach and elect President in case
  of dead-locked Electoral College | 
How and why do PG influence Executive?
| 
How | 
Why | 
| 
Endorsement – Super PAC 
Google Inc. - $801,770 to Obama in 2012
  presidential election race | 
President Sets Policy Agenda 
In
  January State of Union Speech, allows President to outline agenda to
  congress. Any access gained to congress can lead to state of union address | 
| 
Protesting – direct action 
I.E. anti
  abortion groups, anti-capitalist movements such as ‘occupy wallstreet’.  | 
President Appoints SC judges 
SC is
  highest court in land. They carry out judicial review, declaring legislation
  unconstitutional  | 
| 
SOMETHING | 
Presidents can issue executive orders -  means that the President holds the power to
  force through legislation without Congress consent  currently this is a power which is often in
  headlines I.e. immigration | 
| 
Forming Iron Triangles and through Revolving
  Door Syndrome 
Iron
  triangles – involves a three-sided relationship between a congressional
  comittee, a federal dept  and a
  particular interest group or industry. In forging these strong ties they
  create a wall of resistance to change that the White House may be unable to
  breach. I.E.  
·        
  Environmentalist
  group the Sierra club had formed strong links with House Natural resources
  committee and Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
  which caused suspension of keystone pipeline bill that would have enabled
  increased oil supply from US oil reserves | 
Executive is limited by the resources of its
  federal bodies.  | 
How far is it true to claim that pressure group activity in
the USA is both ‘undemocratic and elitist’?
Undemocratic = 
Elitists = suggests that a small group of pressure groups
disproportionately influence the decision makers of the USA. As More comprehensive screening of gun buyers is supported
by 91 percent of U.S. voters, including 88 percent of gun-owning
households, according to a Quinnipiac University poll conducted March
27-April 1. The politics, however, just didn’t work for gun-control
advocates, Congress voted against background checks in 2013
| 
Undemocratic
  and elitist | 
Not
  undemocratic or elitist | 
| 
(1)
  Wealthiest pressure groups do best  | 
(1)
  Regulation exists | 
| 
(2) Iron
  Triangle | 
(2) Winners
  and losers | 
| 
(3)
  Revolving Door Syndrome | 
(3) Encourage
  political participation | 
| 
(4)
  Competing Elites cancel each other out | 
(4)  | 
| 
(5)  |  | 
|  |  | 
 
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