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A partisan is a committed member of a political party. In multi-party systems , the term is used for persons who strongly support their party's policies and are reluctant to compromise with political opponents.
Give us the truth instead of faux objectivity.
By tracking citations and social media shares across various news outlets and correlating with editorial political leaning, they found that right-wing media sources had effectively segregated themselves [146] into in an increasingly isolated silo, creating a propaganda feedback loop [147] [148] continually becoming more extreme and more partisan.
A major discussion in the partisan times that we are living in involves America’s two-party system. There are two major political parties in the United States. There are degrees of labeling in ...
Wikipedia's coverage of political issues needs to adhere to NPOV in the face of partisanship. Partisanship is the tendency of supporters of political parties to subscribe to or at least support their party's views and policies in contrast to those of other parties. Extreme partisanship is sometimes referred to as partisan warfare (see Political ...
According to political analyst James Fallows in The Atlantic (based on a "note from someone with many decades' experience in national politics"), bipartisanship is a phenomenon belonging to a two-party system such as the political system of the United States and does not apply to a parliamentary system (such as Great Britain) since the minority ...
The Cook Partisan Voting Index, abbreviated PVI or CPVI, is a measurement of how partisan a U.S. congressional district or U.S. state is. [1] This partisanship is indicated as lean towards either the Republican Party or the Democratic Party, [2] compared to the nation as a whole, based on how that district or state voted in the previous two presidential elections.
Political scientist Corey Robin has recently argued that conservatism's most consistent traits are 1) A veneration of hierarchy and order and 2) A fear of the lower orders. "Though it is often ...