( They fade away after the economic crisis ends )
It depends on how established the democracy and political parties are in the country.
Generally, at least one other candidate, seeing the impact of short-term public support for economic protest, will incorporate portions of the economic protest party's platform into their own platform. Since the economic protest party is a relatively new party, they generally will not have enough support to get their candidate elected. The candidate who is elected, having used the economic protest parties' platform to get elected, will generally discard the platform, as it has outlived it's usefulness. There may be some half-hearted attempts to implement parts of the platform, but no real effort unless it was already part of the politician's agenda before the economic protest party came into the scene. People may protest the politician's reversal, but the enthusiasm for change and sustained protest is greatly diminished, as people use different excuses and reasons to no longer protest, such as:
In the end, the economic protest party dissolves due to lack of sustained support. By relying on public emotion for support, it fades as quickly as the emotion. People who are quickly and emotionally drawn into politics are just as quickly distracted by the next thing.
they fade away after the economic crisis ends
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economic protest parties
Ideological parties Single-issue parties Economic protest parties Splinter parties *The biggest three are the Constitution, Green, and Libertarian.
Yes, the first political parties were formed around regional and economic differences. This is true.
Minor parties, or third parties as they are usually called, are candidate based parties like the George Wallace's American Independence party. They are usually organized around an ideology.
They are not considered to be parties. Capitalism is an economic system, Communism is a political ideology that aims for a post-capitalist economic system. There are Communist parties, which claim to want to build a communist system eventually. There are no parties with the name capitalist, because we currently live in a capitalist society. Basically, all political parties are capitalist - they are all parties of capitalism.
This is what is known as 'an unfair exchange'. Such situations are usually settled by both parties submitting to binding arbitration.
Third parties.
Parties, usually based in a particular region, especially involving farmers, that protest against depressed economic conditions. These tend to disappear as conditions improve. Parties rooted in pooreconomic times, lacking a clear ideological base, dissatisfied with current conditions and demanding better times.
We usually have parties.
There is no one economic policy for socialism, different socialist movements and parties have different platforms and policies.