democrats, republicans, libertarians, conservatives and independents
partys: is not a word. party's: is to show possession, i.e. - This party's music is lame. - or - to show a contraction (to omit the letter "i" from the word 'is' and combine it with the word 'party') i.e. - This party's lame. parties: is the plural form of party, more than one party. i.e. - I went to two parties this weekend.
The Labour Party.The Conservative Party.The Liberal Democrats.RespectScottish National PartyPlaid CymruAre the British political parties represented in the house of commons. There are three parties from Northern Ireland who are represented in the house of commons namely; Democratic Unionist Party, Ulster Unionist Party, Social Democratic and Labour Party. Northern Ireland also elects five Sinn Fein MP's who refuse to attend parliament in London. There are hundreds of other parties registered in the UK but there are some larger parties represented in various municipalities and national assemblies throughout the UK, namely;- UK Independence Party, Green Party, British National Party, Scottish Socialist Party Many political scientists say only the Conservative and Labor parties are dominant ones in the UK.
The word party is a noun. The plural form is parties.
These are the actual parties as of 2016:Democratic PartyRepublican PartyLibertarian PartyGreen PartyThese are minority Parties:Libertarian PartyGreen Party* The other 2 'party' names listed in the question are fictional, made up for this question.
Republican and DemocraticThe five political parties and their founding dates:* Democratic party --- 1828 * Republican party --- 1854 * Libertarian party --- 1971 * Green party --------- 1984 * Constitution party - 1992I know that John Adams and Thomas Jefferson started them, and that they were classified as 'liberal' and 'conservative'. They evened each other out, even though the two Founding Fathers were not on the best terms. Only later were those two parties called democrats and republicans.
the two-party system
Two
republican democrat libertarian conservationalist tea party green party
The one-party system is not democratic at all, because there is no choice between competing parties and candidates. One-party systems are typical of communist governments and dictatorships.
Five parties nominated candidates for the 2008 U.S. Presidential election, the Republican Party, the Democratic Party, the Libertarian Party, the Green Party and the Constitution Party. In addition to their candidates, Ralph Nader ran as an Independent.
There are three major parties, the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), the National Action Party (PAN), and the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD). There are five other officially registered parties as well. There are also countless minor parties and groupings that are not represented in federal or state government.
Actually it's the "freezing of party systems". Famous concept of Norwegian political scientist Stein Rokkan. Basicaly, on the base of his extended research in West-European political szstems he found out that the party systems and the cleavagesvhas not changed since they emerged (national and industrial revolutions) till his days in the 60s. They froze. There were noe new parties, no new topics. After this period there was the unfreezing of party systems, when new (mainly) postmodern topics emerged, therefore there were new parties and also the voters stopped to be so closely devoted in "their" parties. Since the 60s the party systems has been coming through changes again.
Political parties have developed alongside democracy. State's party system profoundly affect the character of democracy. Without good character, systems of government will fail.
One of those party will have to show which is the better canadate for both parties.
Party's is the singular possessive form of party.
The three main types of party systems are one-party system (single dominant political party), two-party system (two major parties dominate politics), and multi-party system (multiple parties compete for power and representation). Each system has its own advantages and disadvantages in terms of political stability and representation.
The two most common party systems in English-speaking countries are the two-party system, where two major parties dominate the political landscape (e.g., Democrats and Republicans in the U.S., Conservatives and Labour in the UK), and the multi-party system, where several parties compete for power and representation (e.g., Canada, Australia).