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What is the structure of a major party and what are the differences between major and minor parties?
* good response will picked best answer and
recieve 10 pts

2007-02-15 12:23:28 · 5 answers · asked by Kino K 1 in Politics & Government Elections

5 answers

The structure of a major party is that National convention has ultimate power and nominates the presidential candidate. The National committee composed of delegates from states manages affairs between the conventions. There are Congressional Campaign committees and the National Chair manages daily work. The minor parties on the other hand who are Ideological parties (comprehensive, have radical view; most enduring). Examples of these are socialists, communists, and libertarians. The One issue parties address one concern and avoid others.(Free Soil, Know-Nothing, Prohibition). There are regional economic protest parties that protest economic conditions and there factional parties, which are from split in a major party. The Major party also has more people and financial satisfaction than the minor parties. Other differences are that the minor parties have movements not producing parties and the factional parties have had greatest influence.

2007-02-16 10:41:08 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A political party is a bunch of buttholes banding together and supporting each other. They vote their buddies and not necessary the will of the people. They also accept large sums of campaign money from lobbyists and vote their way again and not necessary the will of the people. Political parties and lobbyists should both be outlawed.
The major difference in major and minor parties is the number of members only. They're all buttholes.

2007-02-15 12:31:13 · answer #2 · answered by notadeadbeat 5 · 1 0

Democrats: good, rich
Republicans: evil, really rich

Minor parties: mostly good, but poor.

Its all about the money. The major political parties have money and the minor parties do not. Also, minor parties, like the green party, tend to stand for one issue. While the major parties, republican and democrat, tend to stand for a general idology.

democrats: Liberal, progressive
republicans: conservative

2007-02-15 13:14:45 · answer #3 · answered by baseb11 2 · 0 0

No differences at all if you asked me.
They are both money hungry that's about it.

2007-02-15 12:29:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

http://www.archives.gov/national-archives-experience/charters/constitution.html

Educating yourself is the best answer for all.

2007-02-15 12:28:22 · answer #5 · answered by scottyurb 5 · 0 0

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