Democratic Party: Difference between revisions
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
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*Senate Leader: Chuck Schumer | *Senate Leader: Chuck Schumer | ||
*House Leader: Nancy Pelosi | *House Leader: Nancy Pelosi |
Revision as of 19:44, 19 April 2017
The Democratic Party is an American political party. It is a welfare liberal party and is one of the two major political parties in the United States (the other being the Republican Party).
The Party was the majority in the House of Representatives, as well as in governorships and state legislative seats. Since 2016, the Republican Party took majority in both the House of Representatives and the Senate.
In contemporary times, its primary political ideologies are commitment to tempering capitalism with programs of social welfare. Some other issues have included support for high taxation, strict gun control, a pro-abortion stance, secularism, a multilateral foreign policy except for the frequent unilateralism of President Clinton, governmental and private sector actions to create new jobs, environmentalism, public education, the right of workers to organize in labor unions, and a claim to support for civil rights in contrast to the Democrats' previous support of slavery and segregation.
Libertarians in the Democratic Party are organized into the Democratic Freedom Caucus and maintain a community blog called Freedom Democrats.
A caucus of conservative Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives is organized as the "Blue Dog Democrats".
Overview
- Party Chairman: Tom Perez
- Senate Leader: Chuck Schumer
- House Leader: Nancy Pelosi
- Founded: 1792
- Headquarters: 430 South Capitol Street SE Washington, D.C. 20003
- Political ideology: Liberalism, Social democracy
- Website: Democrats.org
Democratic Party National Leadership
- Chuck Schumer, Senate majority leader from New York
- Nancy Pelosi, House majority leader from California
- Tom Perez, Party Chairman
- Unofficial leadership:
- Democratic primaries
- John Kerry (Presidential candidate 2004)
- Al Gore (Presidential candidate 2000)
- Joe Lieberman (Senator, VP candidate 2000, Presidential contender 2004)
- Hillary Clinton (Former Secretary of State, Former Senator from NY, Presidential Party Nominee 2016, Presidential Contender 2008)
Libertarian Reforms Supported by Some Democrats
- (see Third major party strategy).
- Legalization of same-sex marriage and/or civil unions
- Medical marijuana is supported by some Democrats, but not by most
- Ending or curtailing mandatory minimum sentencing and civil asset forfeiture laws, favored by some Democrats mainly in the Congressional Black Caucus, but not universally supported
Statist Policies Generally Favored by Democrats
- Gun control (not universally favored, see Amendment II Democrats)
- High taxation
- Affirmative action
- Socialized health care
- Involuntary Social Security run by the government
- Government funding for abortions
- Internationalist foreign policy
- Strengthening of drug laws
- Restrictions of private schools and home schooling
External Links
- Democratic National Committee
- 2004 Platform
- Free State Project member Joel Winters is elected to the New Hampshire state house as a Democrat. [1]
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This article originates from or includes content from the public domain Libertarianwiki. |