New Democrats Attack Bell's Tenure In Forests Ministry
Opinion250 News (blog)
By 250 News KAMLOOPS - The BC New Democrats are claiming the Forest Practices Board has confirmed that former forest minister Pat Bell has been grossly understating the true problems facing BC's forests. New Democrat forest critic Norm Macdonald said ...

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Globe and Mail

Are even New Democrats bored by the leadership race?
Globe and Mail
But what if it isn't only the broad Canadian populace who have tuned out the NDP leadership race, but also partisan New Democrats who are unimpressed by what's on offer? Let me stop right here ? I get it; I'ma Liberal so anything I write about the NDP ...
NDP leadership hopefuls converging on SudburyNorthernLife.ca
Tim Harper: NDP leadership candidate Brian Topp warns against trying to ...Toronto Star
Should NDP show more concern for Canada?The Vancouver Observer (blog)
Macleans.ca -Canada.com (blog)
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CBC.ca

Canada slams UN 'paralysis' on Syria
CBC.ca
The New Democrats also weighed in, calling on the federal government to "immediately recall" Canada's ambassador from Syria but also to apply diplomatic intervention. 'Those attempting to cling to power in Syria are morally bankrupt, ...
Canada 'disappointed' by Syria resolution failureCTV.ca

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CBC.ca

Premier calls for 'free-enterprise coalition' to win byelection
Agassiz-Harrison Observer
Premier Christy Clark kicked off the meeting with a fiery campaign-style speech calling for support of the "thin blue line" of the free-enterprise coalition to stop the New Democrats. "The NDP is making promises they can't pay for," she said.
BC Liberals ?standing tall? in by-elections, spokesperson saysStraight.com

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Obama Gives Jobs to New Democrats
Dallas Blog (blog)
Well, President Barack Obama has the right solution for you: If you pledge to vote Democrat in future elections then the president will help you find a job. It's called the new Obama Jobs' Bill. Politico reports that, ?Jennifer Wedel (a Republican who ...

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Demise of the New Democrats - Wall Street Journal

These are not the best of times for moderate Democrats. Most of the Blue Dog Democratic Caucus was wiped out in November's elections, then Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman, the last Democratic hawk, decides not to run for re-election, and on Monday the Democratic Leadership Council announced it is suspending operations amid reports that it is nearly out of cash. The DLC has been a shell of its former self for several years, but its demise is nonetheless symbolic of the Democratic Party's sharp left turn since Bill Clinton rode into the sunset on Ron Burkle's jet. The DLC was founded in 1985 after Ronald Reagan's second landslide to help steer Democrats back to the political center. Founder Al From and ideas-chief Will Marshall popularized the term New Democrats and challenged the party's union and liberal orthodoxy, promoting an agenda of welfare and education reform, "fiscal discipline," free trade and "tolerant traditionalism" on the culture. They were demeaned by the left as Southern reactionaries or fronts for business. But their stature grew after Michael Dukakis's self-demolition in 1988 and as politicians like Mr. Lieberman and former Senators Sam Nunn and Chuck Robb joined their ranks. They were vindicated when an obscure Governor from Arkansas attached himself to their causes, which helped Bill Clinton become the first two-term Democratic President since FDR. We still recall a post-election 1992 DLC gala fund-raiser, headlined by Mr. Clinton, as one of the hottest tickets in Washington. If the DLC's strength was ideas, however, its weakness was organization. Mr. From tried but failed to create a political operation that could compete with the hundreds of millions of dollars that unions devote to elections. In the last decade, George Soros, Peter Lewis of Progressive Insurance and other rich liberals financed new left-wing institutions that have become a shadow Democratic Party and marginalized the DLC. The left's reconquest was complete by the time Barack Obama became President, as the agenda of the last two years has made plain. The tragedy is that the DLC is closing down precisely when something like it is most needed. Mr. Obama is making gestures to business and independents, but so far they look mostly rhetorical. Bruce Reed, the DLC's recent CEO, has become Joe Biden's new chief of staff, but Mr. Reed long ago accommodated himself to the party's leftward drift. Mr. Obama can't even bring himself to endorse a free-trade pact with Colombia. Every Democratic idea shop is now a creature of the left, especially John Podesta's Center for American Progress. All of which in retrospect makes the New Democrats, like Tony Blair's "New Labour" Party in Britain, look less like a lasting movement and more like a temporary strategic response to the Reagan ascendancy—modern Whigs. Democrats have once again become the party of government dominated by public unions, green activists, trial lawyers and the cultural left. In our view this is bad for America because it means the policies of the Pelosi Congresses weren't aberrations. Democrats will govern that way again when they get the chance. Messrs. From and Marshall deserve more credit than they've received for saving Democrats from oblivion in the Reagan era, but the party may need more election defeats and years in the wilderness before the reigning Old Democrats are again willing to think anew.
 


     

The Democratic Party has evolved from anti-Federalist factions that opposed Alexander Hamilton's fiscal policy in late 1790. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison organized these factions in the Democratic-Republican Party. The party in favor of states' rights and strict adherence to the Constitution, is a national bank and the interests of rich, wealthy. The Democratic-Republican Party came to power in elections in 1800. After the War of 1812, the main rival, the Federalist Party dissolved. Democratic-Republican split on the election of a successor to President James Monroe, and the party faction that supported many of the old principles of Jefferson, led by Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren, became the Democratic Party. With the Whig Party, the Democratic Party was the party leader in the United States until the civil war. The Whigs were a commercial holiday, and generally less popular, if better financed. The division of the Whigs on the slavery issue after the Mexican-American War and disappeared. In the 1850's, under the restriction of the Fugitive Slave Act and the Kansas-Nebraska Act, anti-slavery Democrats left the party. Joining with former members of existing parties or decreasing, the Republican Party has become.

Democrats are divided on the choice of a successor to President James Buchanan along the lines of North and South, while the Republican Party took over the 1860 election. As the Civil War, Northern Democrats were divided into War Democrats and the peace Democrats. Confederate States of America, watching the games as evil, has not happened. Most Democrats are united behind the war the Republican president Abraham Lincoln and the Republican National Union Party in 1864 that put Andrew Johnson on the ticket as a Democrat in the South. Johnson replaced Lincoln in 1865, but remained independent of both parties. Democrats benefited from white resentment of southern reconstruction after the war and hostility toward the Republican Party in a row. After Redeemers ended Reconstruction in the 1870's, and the extremely violent disenfranchisement of African Americans occurred in the 1890's, the South, voting Democratic, became known as "solid South." Despite all the Republicans have won two presidential elections, but Democrats remain competitive. The match was dominated by the Bourbons for business Democrats led by Samuel J. Tilden and Grover Cleveland, who represented the commercial banking and railroad interests, and imperialism against the overseas expansion, fought for the gold standard, bimetallism crusade against the opposition and corruption, high taxes and tariffs. Cleveland was elected to nonconsecutive presidential term in 1884 and 1892.

Agrarian Democrats demanding free silver overthrew the Bourbon Democrats in 1896 and nominated William Jennings Bryan for the presidency (a nomination repeatedly by Democrats in 1900 and 1908). Bryan led a vigorous campaign against the interests of the rich East, but lost the Republican William McKinley. Democrats took control of the House in 1910 and elected as President Woodrow Wilson in 1912 and 1916. Wilson led Congress to effectively put to rest the issues of tariffs, money, and antitrust that had dominated politics for 40 years with new progressive laws. The Great Depression of 1929 that occurred under Republican President Herbert Hoover and the Republican Congress opened the way for a more liberal government, the Democrats controlled the House of Representatives almost continuously from 1931 to 1995 and won the presidential election until the Most "in 1968. Franklin D. Roosevelt, elected president in 1932, came out with the government program called the" New Deal ". New Deal liberalism meant the promotion of social welfare, labor, civil rights and business regulation. The opponents, who stressed the long-term growth, support business and low taxes, started calling themselves "conservative."

The problems faced by the parties and the United States after World War II include the Cold War and the civil rights movement. Republicans and Conservatives said the white Southern Democratic coalition with their resistance to New Deal liberalism and the Great Society and the use of the Republican Southern strategy. Afro-Americans, who have traditionally supported the Republican Party, Democrats began to support the throne of the New Deal administration of Franklin Roosevelt and the civil rights movement. main support base of the Democratic Party shifted to the north, which marks a dramatic change in history. Bill Clinton was elected president in 1992, which governs like a Democrat of New York. The Democratic Party lost control of Congress in the 1994 elections the Republican Party. Reelected in 1996, Clinton was the first Democratic president since Franklin Roosevelt to be elected for two terms. After twelve years of Republican rule, the Democratic Party regained majority control of the House and Senate elections in 2006. Some of the key issues in the early game on its platform 21 national past has used the methods of how to fight terrorism, national security, expanding access to health care, worker rights, the environment and preservation programs by the Liberal government. [9] 2010 elections, Democrats lost control of the House, but has maintained a narrow majority in the Senate (111 th Congress reduced). It also lost its majority in state legislatures and the governor of the state.

The Democratic Party traces its origins to the inspiration of the Democratic-Republican Party founded by Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and other influential opponents of the Federalists in 1792. The party has also inspired the modern liberal and the Republicans. Organizationally, the modern Democratic Party was actually born in the early 1830 with the election of Andrew Jackson. Since the division of the Republican Party in the 1912 elections, has been positioned to the left of the Republican Party in economic and social issues. Until the period after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Democratic Party was mainly due to a coalition of two parties divided by regions. Southern Democrats were given generally high ratings from conservative American Conservative Union, while Democrats have generally gave very low scores North. Southern Democrats were a basic block the conservative coalition from both parties that lasted until the Reagan era. The economic philosophy of Franklin D. Roosevelt activist who strongly influenced American liberalism, has shaped much of the economic program of the party since 1932, and served to unite the two regional factions of the party until late 1960. In fact, Roosevelt's New Deal coalition usually controlled the national government until 1970.

In 2004, was the largest political party, with 72 million voters (42.6% of the 169 million registered) claiming affiliation. In comparison, the Republican Party had 55 million members at the time. During the first quarter of 2009, 52% of Americans identify more closely with the Democratic Party, while 39% did so more closely with the Republican Party. A survey by the Pew Research Center published the registered voters in August 2010 stated that 47% identified themselves as Democrats or leaned toward the party, against 43% of Republicans.


 

 

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