Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Republican Party, or GOP (Grand Old Party), One of two major U.S. political parties. It was formed in 1854 by former members of the Whig, Democratic, and Free Soil parties who chose the party’s name to recall the Jeffersonian Republicans’ concern with the national interest above sectional interests and states’ rights.

  2. The platform of the Republican Party of the United States has historically since 1912 been based on American conservatism, [1] [2] [3] contrasting with the modern liberalism of the Democratic Party. The positions of the Republican Party have evolved over time. Currently, the party's fiscal conservatism includes support for lower taxes, gun ...

  3. History of the Republican Party (United States) Young Turks (U.S. politics) Republican efforts to restrict voting following the 2020 presidential election. Republican Leadership Conference. Republican Revolution.

  4. In 1870, the Fifteenth Amendment gave all men in the United States the right to vote, including ex-slaves. In 1913, the Seventeenth Amendment allowed the people to elect their own United States Senators (before this, the state legislatures had chosen U.S. Senators). The Nineteenth Amendment, passed in 1920, gave women the right to vote.

  5. The compromise agreement subsequently collapsed and two Green Party organizations co-existed in the United States until 2019 when the Greens/Green Party USA was dissolved. The Green Politics Network was organized in 1990 and the National Association of Statewide Green Parties formed by 1994.

  6. The 1988 United States presidential election was the 51st quadrennial presidential election held on Tuesday, November 8, 1988. Incumbent Republican Vice President George H. W. Bush defeated the Democratic Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis . It remains the most recent election in which a candidate won over 400 electoral votes, and ...

  7. The National Union Party was the name used by the Republican Party and elements of other parties for the national ticket in the 1864 presidential election during the Civil War. Most state Republican parties did not change their name. [1] The name was used to attract War Democrats, border state voters, and Unconditional Unionist, and Unionist ...