Blue Dog Coalition

(noun)

The Blue Dog Coalition, a caucus of fiscal and social conservatives and moderates forms part of the Democratic Party's current faction of conservative Democrats. They have acted as a unified voting bloc in the past, giving its forty plus members some ability to change legislation and broker compromises with the Republican Party's leadership

Related Terms

  • The Democratic Party
  • Liberals

Examples of Blue Dog Coalition in the following topics:

  • The Democratic Party

    • The Blue Dog Coalition, a caucus of fiscal and social conservatives and moderates, forms part of the Democratic Party's current faction of conservative Democrats.
    • Since election night in 2000, the color blue has become the identified color of the Democratic Party, all major broadcast television networks used blue for Democrat Al Gore.
  • The Two-Party System

    • The Fifth Party System emerged with the New Deal Coalition beginning in 1933.
    • Experts debate whether this era ended in the mid-1960s when the New Deal coalition did, the early 1980s when the Moral Majority and the Reagan coalition were formed, the mid-1990s during the Republican Revolution, or continues to the present.
    • Multi-party governments tend to permit wider and more diverse viewpoints in government and encourage dominant parties to make deals with weaker parties to form winning coalitions.
    • Multi-party governments permit wider and more diverse viewpoints in government, and encourage dominant parties to make deals with weaker parties to form winning coalitions.
    • Blue: Democrat Red: Republican.
  • Party Identification

    • Party coalitions consist of groups that have long-term allegiances to a particular political party.
    • For example, Catholics and labor union members in the Northeast form a part of the Democratic coalition.
    • White fundamentalist Protestants are a component of the Republican coalition.
    • Parties count on coalition members to vote for them consistently in elections.
    • Dark blue indicates districts that supported Democrat for President and Congress; blue indicates districts that supported Democrat for President and a Republican for Congress.
  • The Republican Party

    • Bush and blue for Democrat Al Gore.
    • Prior to the formation of the conservative coalition, which helped realign the Democratic and Republican Party ideologies in the mid-1960s, the party historically advocated classical liberalism, paleo-conservatism, and progressivism.
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