List of political parties in the United States

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This list of political parties in the United States contains past and present political parties in the United States. Political parties are not mentioned in the U.S. Constitution; which defines a nonpartisan system in which votes are cast for individuals, not parties. Political parties nontheless exist due to political freedom and freedom of association. Political parties are private organizations that manage themselves, organize primary elections for local, state, and federal offices, define common policy initiatives, and run campaign contribution drives for the benefit of their party candidates. No laws limit the number of political parties that may operate, so theoretically, it can operate as a simple multi-party system. However, since the Civil War (1864), the country has had a de facto two-party system, with occasional inlets made by so-called "third parties". This is largely a consequence of the winner-takes-all election system and restrictive ballot access laws imposed on the other political parties, as well as the leadership rules in Congress. There are and have been many political parties other than the two dominant ones (the Republican Party and the Democratic Party), but most are generally considered to be of only limited and temporary political significance.

Contents

The political parties are in four categories below, "Current largest parties", "Other current national parties that have endorsed candidates", "Current regional parties that have endorsed candidates" and "Political parties in U.S. history".

An alternate means for categorizing U.S. political parties, historically and currently, is to apply the Federal Election Commission's definition of "national committees" retroactively in time to the beginning of the U.S. To see such a list, see Richard Winger's article in the Election Law Journal, April 2006 (Vol. 5 no. 2), which can be read on-line. Within that article, the list of parties is in Appendix A.

Year is when founded. Order of current parties is alphabetical.

Each of five parties share a degree of national attention by attaining the mathematical possibility of its nominee becoming President of the U.S. -- i.e., having ballot status for its presidential candidate in states whose collective total is at least half of the Electoral-College votes -- in either the most recent presidential election, in 2004, or the next one, in 2008:

Party Name 2004 Electoral Votes 2004 Popular Votes (Millions) Recent Presidential Wins Date Founded Founder(s) Current Party Chair
  Republican Party 286 62 2004, 2000, 1988 1854 Alvan E. Bovay/ Abraham Lincoln Mike Duncan
  Democratic Party 251 59 1996, 1992 1792 / 1820s Thomas Jefferson / Andrew Jackson Howard Dean
  Libertarian Party 0 .47 -- 1971 David Nolan Bill Redpath
  Constitution Party 0 .14 -- 1992 Howard Phillips Jim Clymer
  Green Party 0 .12 -- 1984 Howie Hawkins & John Rensenbrink 7 co-chairs

These parties have offered candidates in recent elections, but did not in 2004 (and do not for 2008) have ballot status in enough states to win the presidency normally. Some do not have presidential candidates, but for other offices only.

Revisions and sourced additions are welcome.

For more parties, including parties which have yet to endorse candidates, see at bottom (below): "See also", "Other lists", and "External links", such as "Directory of U.S. Political Parties".

These parties want to organize nationally, but did not in 2004 (and do not for 2008) have ballot status in enough states to win the presidency normally. Some do not have presidential candidates, but for other offices only.

Revisions and sourced additions are welcome.

For more parties, including parties that have yet to endorse candidates, see at bottom (below): "See also", "Other lists", and "External links", such as "Directory of U.S. Political Parties".

Few, if any, of these parties have nominated presidential candidates. The years are when they were founded.

Revisions and sourced additions are welcome.

Most of the following parties are no longer functioning. Some of them had considerable influence. In order of founding.

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