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Edited on Wed Mar-29-06 11:04 AM by TechBear_Seattle
The two dominant political parties were the Whigs and Democrats. The differences were mainly regional: the Whigs were strong in the industrial north, the Democrats in the plantation south. The Republican Party originated as a split within the Whigs, as a group that supported abolition (primarily for economic reasons, as slave labor decreased the cost of southern goods which made northern goods relatively more expensive.) The Republicans' first presidential candidate was a Whig senator from Illinois by the name of Abraham Lincoln. The Republican victory was so big that by the end of the Civil War, the Whigs had ceased to be a national force.
After the Civil War, and for nearly a century onward, the Democrats essentially were two different parties, a conservative branch in the South that opposed Reconstruction and strongly supported racism and pre-civil war social structures, and a more liberal branch in the North that drew its base from poor European immigrants.
Blacks would be largely ignored by both parties until voter registration drives during the Civil Rights movement. By this time, the Republican Party had become dominated by northern industrialists and "old money." Northern Democrats had absorbed many of the blue-collar goals of the immigrants in the 20s, 30s and 40s, and it was these northern Democrats who went south to do the voter registrations. Republicans continued to believe that the divided Democrats would keep them in power, so they didn't bother to expand their base. As a result, most of the people who registered as voters during the Civil Rights movement registered as Democrats.
With the influx of ideas and ideals from the north, the shrinking base of southern Democrats split off to form the Dixiecrat Party, a short lived group that gave us Wallace's "Segregation now; segregation forever!" speech. Under Kennedy and Johnson, the Dixiecrats were effectively booted from the Democrats. By the 70s, the Democrats were firmly blue-collar, labor, immigrant and relatively liberal and the Republicans were firmly white-collar, management, old money and relatively conservative.
A rightward shift of the Republicans began during the Ford administration. Getting desperate to shore up their support in the South, the GOP began to court religious conservatives and former Dixiecrats. This push was helped by the turmoil of the 70s and early 80s and accelerated under Reagan. By the end of the Bush I administration, the parties had almost completely reversed from where they stood a century before, with Democrats united behind civil rights and progressive politics and the Republicans united behind isolationism and a regressive "return to traditional values" politics.
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