29 research outputs found

    PSC 346.01: American Presidency

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    PSC 100S.01: Introduction to American Government

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    PSC 210S.01: Introduction to American Government

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    PSC 341.01: Political Parties and Elections

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    PSCI 349.09: Montana Government and Politics

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    PSC 366.01: American Presidency

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    PSC 341.01: Political Parties and Elections

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    PSCI 340.01: American Political Institutions

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    World War I and the System of 1896

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    Realignment theory has long offered the primary framework for understanding American political history, particularly as it relates to the party system. The ‘‘System of 1896’’ is central to the theory and holds that William McKinley’s victory in that year ushered in a Republican-dominated era lasting until Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt’s election in 1932. The 10 years of partial—and six years of total—Democratic control of Congress and the White House (1910–20) during this 36-year stretch (1896–1932) remains an anomaly among realignment theorists. I conduct content analyses of Democratic and Republican party documents and media commentary and find that World War I played a crucial role in the GOP’s resurgence in 1920. This conclusion highlights realignment theory’s failure to account for the important role of international events and contingency in general

    PSC 366.01: American Presidency

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