Big tent
In politics, a big tent or catch-all party is a type of political party that seeks to attract voters from different points of view and ideologies. This is in contrast to other parties that defend a determined ideology and seek voters who adhere to that ideology and convince people towards it.
Contents
1 Examples
1.1 Finland
1.2 France
1.3 Germany
1.4 India
1.5 Ireland
1.6 Italy
1.7 Mexico
1.8 Portugal
1.9 United Kingdom
1.10 United States
2 Other examples
3 See also
4 References
Examples
Finland
The centre-right National Coalition Party has been described as catch-all party supporting the interests of the urban middle classes.[1]
France
The La République En Marche! party founded by President Emmanuel Macron has been described as a centrist party with a catch-all nature.[2]
Germany
Both the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) and Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) are considered big tent or catch-all parties, known in German as Volksparteien ("people's parties").[3]
India
The Indian National Congress attracted support from Indians of all classes, castes and religions opposed to the British Empire.[4]
Ireland
Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil are considered catch-all parties, both being supported by people from different social classes and political ideologies.[5] Both parties are however usually described as being on the centre-right and liberal conservative.
Italy
In Italy, the Five Star Movement led by comedian and actor Beppe Grillo has been described as a catch-all, protest party and "post-ideological big tent" because its supporters do not share similar policy preferences, are split on major economic and social issues and are united largely based on "anti-establishment" sentiments.[6] The Five Star Movement's "successful campaign formula combined anti-establishment sentiments with an economic and political protest which extends beyond the boundaries of traditional political orientations", yet its "'catch-all' formula" has limited its ability to become "a mature, functional, effective and coherent contender for government".[6]Forza Italia and its predecessor on the centre-right and the Democratic Party on the centre-left are considered catch-all parties, both having been formed from mergers of political parties with numerous ideological backgrounds.
Mexico
The Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) which held power in Mexico for 71 uninterrupted years from 1929 to 2000 was founded following the Mexican Revolution. Mexican president Plutarco Elías Calles founded the PRI, then known as the National Revolutionary Party, in 1929 with the intent of providing a political space in which all the surviving leaders and combatants of the Mexican Revolution could participate, and to solve the grave political crisis caused by the assassination of president-elect Álvaro Obregón in 1928. Throughout its nine-decade existence, the PRI has adopted a very wide array of ideologies (often determined by the President of the Republic in turn). It nationalized the petroleum industry in the 1940s and the banking industry in the 1970s. In the 1980s, the party went through reforms that shaped its current incarnation, with policies characterized as centre-right, such as the privatization of State-run companies, closer relations with the Catholic church, and embracing free-market capitalism and neoliberal policies.[7][8][9]
The National Regeneration Movement, founded by the current president of Mexico Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has often been described as a big tent party due to its various constituents that joined its ranks during the 2018 general elections.[10][11]
Portugal
The centre-left Socialist Party (PS) and centre-right Social Democratic Party (PSD) have been described as catch-all parties.[12]
United Kingdom
When Gordon Brown became British Prime Minister in 2007, he invited several members from outside the Labour Party into his government. These included former CBI Director-General Digby Jones who became a Minister of State and former Liberal Democrats leader Paddy Ashdown who was offered the position of Northern Ireland Secretary (Ashdown turned down the offer).[13][14] The media often referred to Brown's ministry as "a government of all the talents" or simply "Brown's big tent".[15]
United States
The Democratic Party during the New Deal coalition, formed in support of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal policies from 1930s until 1960s, was a "big-tent" party.[16] This coalition brought together labor unions, working-class voters, farm organizations, liberals, Southern Democrats, African Americans, urban voters and immigrants.[17][18]
The Blue Dog Coalition is a big-tent caucus of centrist and conservative Democrats in the House of Representatives, some being socially conservative and fiscally and economically progressive or vice versa.[citation needed] For a brief period following the 2006 and 2008 elections, when Democrats held a majority in the House, this caucus wielded increased influence over the party, but its power declined again after a large majority of its members were defeated or retired in the 2010 election. Its Republican counterpart is the Republican Main Street Partnership.
In counter to the New Deal coalition, the Republican Party was for much of its history a "big tent" party that encompassed a wide range of right-wing and center-right causes, including a wide range of politicians who were fiscally conservative and socially moderate or liberal and vice versa. During the 1970s and 1980s, the Republican party attracted support from wealthy suburban voters in the South and Midwest, Northeastern moderates, Western libertarians, and rural conservatives across the country. From 1968 to 1988, Republicans won five out of six presidential elections, with the only exception being a narrow loss to Democrat Jimmy Carter in 1976. The culture wars of the 1990s and the growing influence of the Christian right within the party prompted the socially moderate and liberal sections of the Republican base, particularly in the Northeast and Midwest, to begin slowly leaving the party in favor of moderate Democrats or independents.[citation needed] As a result, Republicans have lost the national popular vote in six out of seven presidential elections since 1992, while winning narrow Electoral College victories three times. However, moderate Republicans continued to thrive at the state level until the dawn of the 21st century.
Following the 1974 Dallas Accord, the Libertarian Party embraced the big tent idea to the extent it ensured that the anarchist-capitalist views would not be excluded from the majority minarchist party.[19]
Other examples
ANO 2011, Czech Republic[20][21]
Austrian People's Party[22]
Brazilian Democratic Movement, Brazil[23]
Christian Democracy,[24] Italy (1943–1994)
Christian Democratic Union of Germany[3][22]
Civic Platform,[25] Poland- Democratic Montenegro
Democratic Opposition of Serbia (2000–2003)- Democratic Party of Socialists of Montenegro
Fianna Fáil,[26][27] Republic of Ireland
Five Star Movement, Italy
Georgian Dream[28]
Indian National Congress[29]
Institutional Revolutionary Party, Mexico
Islamic Iran Participation Front[30]
Joint List, Israel
La République En Marche!,[2][31] France
Liberal Democratic Party,[32] Japan
Liberal Party of Canada[33]
March 8 Alliance Lebanon
March 14 Alliance Lebanon
National Coalition Party,[1] Finland
National Democratic Party Egypt (1978–2011)
National Regeneration Movement,[34] Mexico
Nidaa Tounes Tunisia
Nur Otan, Kazakhstan
People's Front for Democracy and Justice,[35] Eritrea
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada[36]
Scottish National Party, Scotland [37][38]
Social Democratic Party,[12][39] Portugal
Social Democratic Party of Germany[3]
Socialist Party,[12] Portugal
South Tyrolean People's Party[40][41]
United Russia,[42] Russia
Together for Yes,[43] Ireland
All Progressives Congress, Nigeria
Human Shield, Croatia
Democratic Unity Roundtable, Venezuela
New Azerbaijan Party, Azerbaijan
Arab Socialist Union Egypt (1962–1978)
Freedom Party Egypt
Conference Party Egypt- Cambodian People's Party
- Save Romania Union
Democratic Party, Italy
Cambiemos Argentina
National Opposition Union Nicaragua
Together for Yes,[44] Spain- Cameroon People's Democratic Movement
National Revolutionary Party Afghanistan (1974–1978)
Nacionalista Philippines
Coalition for Change Philippines
Reformist Iran
Coalition for a European Montenegro (1998–2016)
With the strength of the people Brazil (2010–2016)
General People's Congress Yemen- Republican Party of Armenia
Serbian Progressive Party[45][46]
See also
- Bipartisanship
- Broad church
- Elite party
- Party of power
References
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^ Schettino, Macario (6 June 2018). "Mexico 2018: How AMLO Took a Page from the PRI Playbook". Americas Quarterly. Retrieved 18 September 2018.Morena’s star has risen so quickly because it offers refuge to such a wide range of beliefs and ideologies. The party has room for old guard supporters of Hugo Chávez and Fidel Castro, young leftist academics, former PRI leaders, evangelical Christians, actors, athletes, and even the odd business tycoon or two. In this way the party resembles the big tent of the PRI, which more than a guiding philosophy was guided by the administration of political power.
^ Graham, Dave (20 March 2018). "Mexican leftist's 'big tent' pitch puts presidency in sight". Reuters. Retrieved 18 September 2018.In a few months, he has assembled a coalition stretching from socially conservative Christian evangelicals to admirers of socialist Venezuela and business tycoons, each with contrasting visions for Mexico. Dozens of lawmakers from across the political spectrum have switched sides to join Lopez Obrador’s National Regeneration Movement (MORENA), a party that is not yet four years old.
^ abc Marco Lisi; André Freire (2014). "The selection of political party leaders in Portugal". In Jean-Benoit Pilet; William Cross. The Selection of Political Party Leaders in Contemporary Parliamentary Democracies: A Comparative Study. Routledge. p. 124. ISBN 978-1-317-92945-1.
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