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  2. List of United States political appointments across party lines

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States...

    Presidents may appoint members of a different party to high-level positions in order to reduce partisanship or improve cooperation between the political parties. [2] Also presidents often appoint members of a different party because they need Senate confirmation for many of these positions, and at the time of appointment the Senate was ...

  3. Political parties in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_parties_in_the...

    American electoral politics have been dominated by successive pairs of major political parties since shortly after the founding of the republic of the United States. Since the 1850s, the two largest political parties have been the Democratic Party and the Republican Party—which together have won every United States presidential election since 1852 and controlled the United States Congress ...

  4. Party divisions of United States Congresses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party_divisions_of_United...

    Control of the Congress from 1855 to 2025 Popular vote and house seats won by party. Party divisions of United States Congresses have played a central role on the organization and operations of both chambers of the United States Congress—the Senate and the House of Representatives—since its establishment as the bicameral legislature of the Federal government of the United States in 1789.

  5. Opinion - Is it 1833 yet? The long history of the partisan ...

    www.aol.com/news/opinion-1833-yet-long-history...

    The effect of partisanship is a massive increase in the number of Americans who cannot depend on the media to provide reporting they can trust. Gallup reports 69 percent of U.S. adults have little ...

  6. United States state legislatures' partisan trend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_state...

    This chart shows the trends in the partisan composition of the various state legislatures in the United States. In most cases the data point for each year is July 1, a time when few elections are scheduled.

  7. History lessons: When America's politics turn ugly, violent

    www.aol.com/news/history-lessons-americas...

    Historian Jon Grinspan, a curator at the Smithsonian Institution, has studied how intense partisanship in the 19th century was driven by people feeling isolated, their lives unstable, feeding an ...

  8. Partisan (politics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partisan_(politics)

    It can be variously translated as party-mindedness, partisanship, or party spirit. The term can refer to both a philosophical position concerning the sociology of knowledge and an official doctrine of public intellectual life in the Soviet Union. [5] The term may also mean the membership of a person in a certain political party.

  9. Political realignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_realignment

    The left-wing Indian National Congress, which had led the country to independence from the United Kingdom in 1947 and had won every general election since the first post-independence election in 1952, lost power to the Janata Party led by Morarji Desai, after the immensely unpopular imposition of The Emergency by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in ...