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| date      = October 29, 2012
 
| date      = October 29, 2012
 
| title    = Congress
 
| title    = Congress
| before    = [[#Explanation|↓ Skip to explanation ↓]]
 
 
| image    = congress.png
 
| image    = congress.png
 +
| imagesize =
 
| titletext = It'd be great if some news network started featuring partisan hack talking heads who were all Federalists and Jacksonians, just to see how long it took us to catch on.
 
| titletext = It'd be great if some news network started featuring partisan hack talking heads who were all Federalists and Jacksonians, just to see how long it took us to catch on.
 
}}
 
}}
  
Click the date above the comic to go to the xkcd page, and there is a link to the [http://xkcd.com/1127/large/ much larger version].
+
Click the date above the comic to go to the xkcd page, and there is a link to the much larger version. Go find something interesting, don't worry, the wiki will still be here.  
  
 
==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
It appears that the (at the time) {{w|United States presidential election, 2012|upcoming 2012 election}} has put [[Randall]] into a political state of mind, as this is the second comic in a few weeks that has dealt with political history ([[1122: Electoral Precedent]]). As with that comic, this comic goes through the entire history of the {{w|Federal government of the United States|U.S. Federal Government}}. Also notably, Randall makes a number of observations that are akin to the type of observations Randall denounces in 1122 (e.g. for 1928, Randall notes that no Republican has since won the presidency without a Nixon or a Bush on the ticket). Just around the election he posted two more comics related to this: [[1130: Poll Watching]] and [[1131: Math]].
+
It appears that the {{w|United States presidential election, 2012|upcoming 2012 election}} has put [[Randall]] into a political state of mind, as this is the second comic in a few weeks that has dealt with political history ([[1122: Electoral Precedent]]). As with that comic, this comic goes through the entire history of the {{w|Federal government of the United States|U.S. Federal Government}}. Also notably, Randall makes a number of observations that are akin to the type of observations Randall denounces in 1122 (e.g. for 1928, Randall notes that no Republican has since won the presidency without a Nixon or a Bush on the ticket).
  
 
===U.S. Federal Government===
 
===U.S. Federal Government===
In the {{w|Federal government of the United States|U.S. Federal Government}}, one of the {{w|Separation of powers|checks and balances}} is a {{w|bicameralism|bicameral}} {{w|United States Congress}}, which consists of two "houses": the {{w|United States Senate|Senate}}, its "upper" house; and the {{w|United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives}} ("the House"), its "lower house". The Senate consists of 2 senators elected from each state (thus 100 total), while the House consists of 435 voting representatives (a number decided upon in {{w|Apportionment Act of 1911|1911}} by law) whose {{w|United States congressional apportionment|apportionment}} is split between the states proportional to their population; although each state gets at least one (the House also has non-voting representatives from non-state territories like {{w|Puerto Rico}} and the {{w|District of Columbia}}). Every ten years, the House is reapportioned based on the latest census. The most populous state as of 2012 is California which has 53 seats in the House. Senators serve 6-year terms with elections held every 2 years for one-third of the seats. Members of the House (called Representatives or Congressmen/women) serve 2-year terms with all of the seats contested every 2 years.
+
In the {{w|Federal government of the United States|U.S. Federal Government}}, one of the {{w|Separation of powers|checks and balances}} is a {{w|bicameralism|bicameral}} {{w|United States Congress}}, which consists of two "houses": the {{w|United States Senate|Senate}}, its "upper" house; and the {{w|United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives}} ("the House"), its "lower house". The Senate consists of 2 senators elected from each state (thus 100 total), while the House consists of 435 voting representatives (a number decided upon in {{w|Apportionment Act of 1911|1911}} by law) whose {{w|United States congressional apportionment|apportionment}} is split between the states proportional to their population; although each state gets at least one (the House also has non-voting representatives from unincorporated territories like {{w|Puerto Rico}} and the {{w|District of Columbia}}). Every ten years, the House is reapportioned based on the latest census. The most populous state as of 2012 is California which has 53 seats in the House. Senators serve 6-year terms with elections held every 2 years for one-third of the seats. Members of the House (called Representatives or Congressmen/women) serve 2-year terms with all of the seats contested every 2 years.
  
 
In order for a bill to become a law, it must be passed by both the House and the Senate. In a way, this theoretically ensures that the bill is supported both by the majority of states (the Senate), and the majority of the population (the House). The President may then sign the bill into law, he may "veto" the bill, or he may do nothing, in which case it becomes a law if and only if Congress is in session after a waiting period of 10 days (not including Sundays).
 
In order for a bill to become a law, it must be passed by both the House and the Senate. In a way, this theoretically ensures that the bill is supported both by the majority of states (the Senate), and the majority of the population (the House). The President may then sign the bill into law, he may "veto" the bill, or he may do nothing, in which case it becomes a law if and only if Congress is in session after a waiting period of 10 days (not including Sundays).
  
 
===Political ideologies===
 
===Political ideologies===
In politics, there is a {{w|political spectrum|scale}} that represents the political beliefs of a politician. The scale goes from "{{w|Left-wing politics|left}}" to "{{w|Right-wing politics|right}}" of "center" which generally describes a balancing point of beliefs (sometimes called "left-wing" or "right-wing").
+
In politics, there is a {{w|political spectrum|scale}} that represents the political beliefs of a politician. The scale goes from "{{w|Left-wing politics|left}}" to "{{w|Right-wing politics|right}}" of "center" - which generally describes a balancing point of beliefs (sometimes called "left-wing" or "right-wing").
  
The "left" is a general belief in social justice, and is sometimes associated with {{w|socialism}}. Modern left-wingers generally prioritize equality, and support policies like welfare and government-subsidized healthcare. This trends toward having a larger federal government. In the U.S., "liberal" is a term often used to denote left-leaning tendencies.
+
The "left" is a general belief in social justice, and is sometimes associated with {{w|socialism}}. Modern left-wingers generally mandate equality, and support policies like welfare and government-subsidized healthcare. This trends toward having a larger federal government. In the U.S., "liberal" is a term often used to denote left-leaning tendencies.
  
The "right" generally believe in personal responsibility and individual liberty, which is often termed {{w|conservatism|conservative}}. This trends towards having less regulation and thereby a smaller federal government. The goal is to keep the nation stable, and reducing the interference by the government with a person's wealth. This ostensibly means lower taxes, because the government does not provide as much.
+
The "right" generally believe in conserving the social and economic status quo, which is often termed {{w|conservatism|conservative}}. This trends towards having less regulation and thereby a smaller federal government. The goal is to keep the nation stable, and reducing the interference by the government with a person's wealth. This ostensibly means lower taxes, because the government does not provide as much.
  
Politicians typically align themselves into groups of similar beliefs and positions called "parties". In the U.S., there have generally been two dominant parties, although there have been times where three or more parties have shared roughly equal influence and support. In today's politics (which is apparently known as (the second part of) the fifth era of political parties, or {{w|Fifth Party System}}, as noted on the outside edges of the comic) of the two current primary U.S. political parties, the {{w|Democrats}} are the left-leaning party, and the {{w|Republicans}} are the right-leaning party. The dominant parties are generally considered "moderate" in their left- or right-wing leanings, as either party appears to requires the support of a majority (or a few percent under) of voters to win. However, this is complicated by a process called gerrymandering where election boundaries are redrawn to allow a political advantage to the party currently in power. Thus a popular majority state wide or any ratio of votes to representatives will not necessarily be reflected in delegates awarded, an example being the Republicans' REDMAP 2012 report ([http://maddowblog.msnbc.com/_news/2013/01/21/16630863-virginia-republicans-move-for-permanent-majority]). Smaller parties often run candidates with more extreme views, but such candidates rarely win, due to a more limited number of possible supporters ensuring that even a relatively large minority would have zero chance of representation. (see {{w|Duverger's law}}).
+
Politicians typically align themselves into groups of similar beliefs and positions called "parties". In the U.S., there have generally been two dominant parties (although there have been times where three or more parties have shared roughly equal influence and support. In today's politics (which is apparently known as the fifth era of political parties, or {{w|Fifth Party System}}, as noted on the outside edges of the comic) of the two current primary U.S. political parties, the {{w|Democrats}} are the left-leaning party, and the {{w|Republicans}} are the right-leaning party. The dominant parties are generally considerate "moderate" in their left- or right-wing leanings, which is by necessity, as either party requires the support of a majority (or a few percent under) of voters to win. Smaller parties often run candidates with more extreme views, but such candidates rarely win, due to a more limited number of possible supporters ensuring that even a relatively large minority would have zero chance of representation. (see {{w|Duverger's law}}).
  
 
===The comic===
 
===The comic===
The comic effectively consists of three separate charts: The left- and right-hand charts are the main charts; they represent the Senate and House respectively, and purport to show the left- and right-wing leanings of each legislature through U.S. history. There is a legend on the right that sets out fairly clearly how the charts work, but basically Randall has split each wing into three levels including the very moderate or "Center" right or left, and the more extreme or "Far" right or left, as well as the average left and right without prefix. A dotted yellow line represents the balance of power in each legislature, and white lines represent the leanings of certain notable people including presidents.
+
The comic effectively consists of three separate charts: The left- and right-hand charts are the main charts; they represent the Senate and House respectively, and purport to show the left- and right-wing leanings of each legislature through U.S. history. There is a legend on the right that sets out fairly clearly how the charts work, but basically Randall has split each wing into three levels including the very moderate or "Center" right or left, and the more extreme or "Far" right or left, as well as the average left and right, without prefix. A dotted yellow line represented the balance of power in each legislature, and white lines represent the leanings of certain notable people including presidents.
  
Some presidents are not indicated, because they were never senators or congressmen (most of these were state Governors, such as {{w|Bill Clinton|Clinton}}, {{w|George W. Bush|Bush}} and 2012 candidate {{w|Mitt Romney}}). As may be noted from the chart, {{w|Barack Obama}} is considered "left" while {{w|Paul Ryan}} is considered "far right". It's also notable that the "center right" ideology appears to be completely eradicated from the House and is waning in the Senate (although a similar trend is shown around 1900 with the centrists making a comeback thereafter).
+
Some presidents are not indicated, because they were never senators or congressmen (most of these were state Governors, such as {{w|Bill Clinton|Clinton}}, {{w|George W. Bush|Bush}} and 2012 candidate {{w|Mitt Romney}}). As may be noted from the chart, {{w|Barack Obama}} is considered "left" while {{w|Paul Ryan}} is considered "far right". It's also notable that the "center right" ideology appears to be completely eradicated from the House and is waning in the Senate [http://xkcd.com/859/  (although a similar trend is shown around 1900 with the centrists making a comeback thereafter.]
  
 
On either side of these charts, there are descriptions or explanations for expansions and contractions of each ideological group.
 
On either side of these charts, there are descriptions or explanations for expansions and contractions of each ideological group.
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Finally, there's a little extra commentary on the right side, below the legend.
 
Finally, there's a little extra commentary on the right side, below the legend.
 
===The title text===
 
The title text refers to two political parties in American history: the Federalists and the Jacksonians.
 
 
Note that this means the two parties are not strictly contemporaries. There are features of both the modern Republican and Democratic parties in each, so depending on the topic presented, it may take a long time to figure out that they are not these modern parties until the topic of discussion changes. They do, however, make a nice dichotomy.
 
 
The Federalists are one of the oldest political parties in American History. Federalists were seen as conservative in their time, and similarly to modern Republicans much of their support came from bankers and businessmen and they were committed to a fiscally sound and government, but on the flip side they favored a strong central government, regulation of industry, a national banking system, and were protectionistic.
 
 
The Jacksonian party is one of the four branches of the Democratic Party that developed during the political chaos after the Federalist party died out in the War of 1812. The Jacksonians were considered liberal for their time, they believed in one man, one vote, regardless of standing, and their mascot was a donkey and they're the ancestors of the modern Democratic Party, but on the flip side they did not want a strong national government and believed that the government should have limited impact in the regulation of industry, going so far as to end the bank of the United States, and were fiercely expansionistic.
 
 
Network news channels regularly feature {{w|Pundit|talking heads}}, supposed 'experts' who offer their opinion on the topical political stories. Where these talking heads are strongly aligned with a particular party, and are unconcerned with anything other than winning, they could be described as a {{w|Partisan|partisan}} {{w|Political hack| hacks}}.
 
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
{{incomplete transcript}}
 
<!--
 
*This transcript is neither only a representation the visible text in the small image or all of the text in the full image.
 
*Since there is text visible all over even the small image it would be most relevant to have a full transcript.
 
**Or at least make a separate transcript page like for [[980: Money\Transcript]].
 
**In the latter case this transcript below should then be reduced to only visible text in small image!
 
-->
 
 
:A history of
 
:A history of
 
:'''The United States Congress'''
 
:'''The United States Congress'''
 
:Partisan and ideological makeup
 
:Partisan and ideological makeup
  
:[The comic is divided into three massive sections, SENATE, PRESIDENCIES, and HOUSE. Timelines run backwards down the page between each section. In the HOUSE and SENATE sections, shifting, curving red and blue areas of different brightness illustrate the shifting balance of power between "Members of Left-Leaning Parties" and "Members of Right-Leaning Parties". Under PRESIDENCIES, different administrations are labeled and wars are shaded in gray. There are notes throughout all sections.]
+
:[The comic is divided into three massive sections, SENATE, PRESIDENCIES, and HOUSE. Timelines run backwards down the page between each section. In the HOUSE and SENATE sections, shifting, curving red and blue areas of different brightness illustrate the shifting balance of power between "Members of Left-Leaning Parties" and "Members of Right-Leaning Parties". Under PRESIDENCIES, different administrations are labeled and wars are shaded in grade. There are notes throughout all sections.]
  
 
:[There are additional notes on the right.]
 
:[There are additional notes on the right.]
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::Because members of Congress have served in overlapping terms with past members in a chain back to the first Congress, the system allows comparison of ideology across time - even accounting for individual members' ideological drift. (Note: Scores are comparable across time but not between chambers.)
 
::Because members of Congress have served in overlapping terms with past members in a chain back to the first Congress, the system allows comparison of ideology across time - even accounting for individual members' ideological drift. (Note: Scores are comparable across time but not between chambers.)
 
::For more detail, see Poole and Rosenthal's website, voteview.com.
 
::For more detail, see Poole and Rosenthal's website, voteview.com.
 
<!-- Here is a OCR'ed transcript. It's pretty accurate, but needs some revision. Here it is:
 
A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS PARTISAN AND IDEOLOGICAL MAKEUP
 
The chart width on each side corresponds to the number of seats held by two groups of parties:7 I Seats held 1;77c=13'"' Seats held by I left-leaning parties right-leaning parties (e.g. Democratic. Green) (e.g. Republican. Constitution) I
 
• .T Left L .Lefte.to., Reit (300 to S00,• • Center Left (0 to -300 center', Center Rjght (0 to 300)•
 
(
 
Color shows the ideological makeup of the two sides based on member DW-NOMINATE SCORES (see below for more)
 
SENATE
 
Members of Left-Leaning Parties
 
In the later years of the Bush Administration, Democrats regained control of the Senate in 2006, and won a larger majority in 2008 during the onset of the financial crisis.
 
• PAR , SYS
 
FOURTH PARTY SYSTEM
 
THIRD PARTY YST
 
A recession, combined with Eiesnhower Administration policies unpopular with labor unions, helped Democrats make huge Senate gains in the 1958 midterm election,
 
Ronald Reagaris commanding victory over Jimmy Carter helped bring Democratic support ,r Republican Senate candidates.
 
Amid Democratic chaos, Republicans gained five Senate seats in 1968 and Nixon narrowly won the presidency.
 
Anger over Democratic support for civil rights led to pro-Segregation southerners leaving the Democratic party.
 
The series of victories by R000velt's New Deal Coalition led to the most lopsided 
 
Democrats elected in FDR's New Deal waves 4 included future president A-HarryTruman and labor 'rer advocate Robert Wagner.
 
191 The w se legislatures.T
 
1928 was the last year in which the Republican Party won the White House without a Bush or Nixon on the ticket.
 
Teddy R000velt, unhappy with his chosen successor (and apparently bored with not being president anymore) challenged President Taft for the 1912 Republican nomination.
 
gow
 
The return of Southern partisans who had left to join the Confederacy eventually gave the Democrats the political power to end Reconstruction and put in place segregationist Jim Crow laws.
 
The Republicans dominated national politics after the war, with Grover Cleveland 90e only Democrat elected president over a period of more than half a century.
 
Republicans gained Senate seats in 1888 from a number of recently-admitted states.
 
CIVIL*WAR When the South seceded following
 
Nconai UNIONIST
 
Lincoln's election, most Southern Senate seats were declared vacant.
 
SECOND PARTY YST
 
Senator Henry Clay, by skillfully negotiating compromises, is said to have singlehandedly held off the Civil War for 40 years.
 
Senator John C. Calhoun, with his fiery arguments that white slaveowners were the real oppressed minority, helped emcee it eventually happened.
 
This strange influx of candidates on the right to parties on the left is a sign of the complete collapse of the Federalists.
 
JohnTyler was a former Democrat who opposed the Whig platform.When he became Pi-esident after Harris., death, the Whigs revolted, and—without support from either party—he suffered political deadlock.
 
DEMOCRATS The Democratic Party was formed by the followers of Andrew Jackson, an outspoken, aggressive populist who got in a lot of duels.
 
They fought against elite and business interests and stuck up for the the little guy—as long as the little guy was white.With a natural base among poor southern farmers, the Democrats became the party of slavery.
 
The basic contradiction of a party of slaveowners ostensibly standing for egalatarianism would go unresolved until the late 20th century. The 18th Congress w.ta,s,echoaveorwtic.hWeimhaitnghiayddobemcionmanet
 
iftPRae tpU jbel iffcea rnssc:rf';:gpmeen'tecdrai tniO four warring factions. DEMOCRATIC-REPUBLICANS The Democratic-Republi cans (or "Jefferson ian Republicans") were the party formed by the anti-administration faction.
 
This chart places them provisionally on the left, although since they absorbed many pro-administration figures, their DW-NOMINATE average is very cloo to zero.
 
ANTI-ADMINISTRATION The anti-administration faction favored states' rights and farmers, and opposed what they saw as Hamilton's tendencies toward elitism and monarchism.
 
PRESIDENCIES Barack Obama
 
2006-2004
 
2002-2000
 
1998-1996
 
1994-1992
 
1988
 
1.6 1984
 
1.2 1980
 
1938 1936
 
1 93 1
 
George W. Bush.
 
Bill <LINTON
 
George H.VV. sewu BUSH.
 
Ronald REAGAN.
 
Jimmy CARTER Gerald FORD.
 
 
Richard NIXON.
 
Lyndon B. JOHNSON
 
John F KENNEDY
 
Dwight EISENHOWER.
 
Harry S •TRUMAN
 
Roo.. di...Re
 
(ROOSEVELT
 
1906 1904
 
190 2 1900
 
1886 1884
 
1 882 1880
 
1866 1864
 
1862 1860
 
Ig8 1856
 
I 806 1804
 
Calvin COOLIDGE. Warren G. HARDING.
 
Woodrow _II/11 WILSON
 
William Howard TAFT.
 
Theodore ROOSEVELT.
 
Mc Krt. assassinated
 
Benjamin HARRISON.
 
Grover CLEVELAND Chester A. ARTHUR' l'adrnesA. GARFIELD•  Rutherford B. HAYES.
 
Ulysses S.
 
GRANT.
 
Andrew JOHNSON.
 
Abraham LINCOLN.
 
James (BUCHANAN
 
Franklin PIERCE
 
Millard FILLMORE. zachary TAYLOR.
 
James K. •POLK John TYLER. HARRISON•
 
Martin Van •BUREN
 
Andrew JACKSON
 
John Quincy ADAMS.
 
James •MONROE
 
james w"18'i MADISON
 
Thomas JEFFERSON
 
John ADAMS.
 
George WASHINGTON.
 
2002 2000
 
I 9 98 1996
 
I 95, 1988
 
I 9 86 1984 1980 1976
 
1972 1968
 
I 9 66 1964 1960
 
I9S8 1956
 
I 9 SO 1948
 
I 946 1944
 
1932 1928 1924
 
1922 1920 1916 1912 1908
 
I 9 06 1904 1900
 
1 898 1896
 
1890 1888
 
1886 1884 1880 1876 1872 1868
 
I 8 66 1864 1860
 
I8S8 1856
 
I 8 SO 1848
 
1832 1828 1824 1820 1816 1812 1808
 
1806 1804 1800
 
1796
 
I 7 90 1788
 
HOUSE
 
Members of Left-Leaning Parties Members of Right-Leaning Parties 311 320
 
h Right
 
The Tea Party wave of 2010 helped House Republicans regain all the ground they had lost in 2006 and 2008 and then some.
 
The Democratic Party's gains in 2006 and 2008 came largely from centrist candidates in swing districts—the same ones who would -- be voted out in 20 I
 
Center
 
Democratic losses in 1994 came almost exclusively among centrists, leaving the left and far left blocs relatively untouched—a pattern which would continue in 2010
 
Democrats gained a
 
While the size of the Republican majority didn't Np change very much during this period, its internal makeup did.The centrist bloc nearly vanished, and in every election from 1984 to 2004, the far right bloc grew.
 
Newt Gingrich's Republican Revolution of 1994 gave the GOP control of the House for the first time in 40 years.
 
With Ronald Reagan's election in 1980, Republicans regained the ground they lost afterWatergate.
 
number of-House oats
 
in the aftermath of the
 
Watergate scandal.
 
Democrats added seats in 1958 through wins in the Rust Belt and the gain of every seat in Connecticut's delegation.
 
The New Deal wave consisted almost entirely of centrist Democrats. Over the course of the 20th century, theo centrists generally lost ground to left and far-left Democrats—a slow motion version of the process that has happened more rapidly and completely among House Republicans.
 
Other than these few years after the war, the House was under Democratic control for the entire period from the Great Depression until the Republican Revolution of 1994.
 
Republicans gained seats in I 942, as they had in the late 9I0s, due to concern over American entanglement in a war in Europe.
 
The onset of the Great Depression sparked a huge backlash against the Republicans who had held power throughout the 1920s.
 
PROGRESSIVE '1 AND fARME LABOR PARTIES
 
After losing his bid for the nomination, Roosevelt ran as a third-party candidate, splitting the Republican vote and leading to Wil.n's victory and huge (albeit temporary) Democratic gains in the House.
 
The 1896 presidential contest, which pitted Democrat William Jennings Bryan against Republican William McKinley, was probably the most heated election in American history.
 
In 1882, Democrats won seats thanks to disapproval of a Republican Congress that seemed too friendly to industry.
 
POPULIST
 
The "Panic of 1893" economic depression led to Republicans winning the largest single landslide in Congressional history. John Clayton was elected after ing a first count t 1:fttlefIrtlunsg if:te h e
 
The Democrat of seats in I 880 but no *, swon a lot one seems really sure why.
 
was shot by an unidentified assassin. His ideological category is unknown.
 
1 I
 
Disapproval of Grant's handing of the Panic of I 873 (an economic depression) led to Democrats winning control of the House for the first time since the war.
 
CIVIL*WAR
 
4)
 
After most Southern represtatives left to join the Confederate Congitss, the Democrats who remained were defined by opposition to the war
 
REPUBLICANS The Republican Party formed around opposition to slavery. As the party of the North, it
 
and financial interests, i ndustrialization, and Puritan - influenced social reforms eventually culminating in the Pro hibiti on movement.
 
WHIGS The Whigs were supporters of business and markets, economic modernization, and social reform.
 
They ultimately collapod over the issue of slavery, with the abolitionist faction eventually becoming the Republican Party.
 
The factions created by the .h ism in the Ion Congress then rejoined into a chaotic series of new parties, some only lasting one term. with Alexander Hamilton and administration faction allied ADMINISTRATION The pro-administration faction favored a central bank, and relaxed relations with party formed from the pro-George Washi ngton. sound national fiscal policy, Great Britain. PRO-FEDERALISTS The Federalists were the
 
LEGEND
 
Congress and cause an ideological bloc to grow rZtnill7d=o= C'nongre'ess.s Taliturg'theireniderftm'rological=to striik LIM it,'Ithetirem=7:::To"17ww7
 
, WHIG
 
Thin:LT:fiche sidenw'shasth:cornitrol'oinf tthe'cramber.
 
If a bloc Loses members in coe electich and gains them in the next. the exiting stream may reioin. nereehily mem de • tS who sem. Othr7;dZs'!.°:7b7:::sh.rMelt =intcd
 
Tinted We. outlines mark the approomate rnember.ip of some of the smaller pot..
 
HOW IDEOLOGY IS CALCULATED
 
Each member of Congress is assigned to an 'ideological category usrig DWNOMINATE a stat.ical system created by political scientists Keith Poole and Howard Rosenthal This system rat. each member of Congress's idedegical poshion positich based ch their votes. DWNOMINATE is pure, mathematical and involv. no judgernent co the content of bilk Instead.rnembers of Ccogress are placed ch a spectrum based ch how consistent, they vote together. VVhAe people argue that ideology is rrany-dimen,onal. Poole and Rosenthal found that nearly all Congres,onal voting
 
predicted by using just coe ideological variable. This variable tums out to rough, arrespond to position ch
 
Because members of Cal,. have served in overlapping terms with past members in a chain badcto the frst Congress.the system dm. comparisch of irfeology across
 
.11_ (Note: Scores are ccmparable across time but not between chambers,
 
F....de... Fn.
 
From the 1960s to the 1990s, conservative Southerners gradually left the Democratic Party while liberal Northerners moved the other way—reducing the ideological overlap between the parties and making each more homogenous.
 
Political scientists break US history into partisan eras called "party systems." Although the Fifth Party System (the New Deal Coalition) underwent this massive realignment in the 1960s and 1970s, they refuse to agree that the Fifth Party System has ended, because they can't point to a specific election where the realignment happened.This means we're now in the second part of the Fifth Party System, which seems like it might just be a political science Deathly Hallows/Breaking Dawn thing.
 
Voters in the early days of the Great Depression rallied around New York governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who united farmers, labor unions, academics, and minorities into the New Deal Coalition, whose slow disintegration was at the core of partisan politics for much of the 20th century
 
The late 1800s saw an obsessive focus on the issue of bimetalism that it took me a while to understand.
 
Farmers and poor people who owed money favored a dual gold-silver standard, because it would lead to inflation, which would make debts easier to pay off. Wealthy bankers—who owned that debt—wanted the opposite.This became the focus of a Main St. vs.Wall. St cultural struggle culminating in William Jennings Bryan's famous "Cross of Gold" speech. (Despite his fiery oratory, Bryan lost the presidential election to McKinley)
 
Politics in the first half of the 1800s was completely dominated by the issue of slavery, which was supported by poor white Southern farmers—Democrats—and opposed by the Northern Protestant intellectuals and wealthy businesspeople who formed first the Whigs and then the Republican Party.
 
During this period, as during the Civil Rights era, a second DW-NOMINATE variable becomes important, and corresponds to voting behavior on regional issues. If the first variable represents the left-right variable, then during these periods the second variable could simply be thought of as representing the racism spectrum.
 
The first divide in Congress was between supporters (right) and opponents (left) of the Washington Administration. -->
 
 
==Trivia==
 
* The axis for the senate is mislabelled; on the right, it goes 0-10-20-30-40-50-'''40-40'''-80.
 
* This comic used to be [https://web.archive.org/web/20211215045721/https://store.xkcd.com/products/congress-poster available as a poster] in the xkcd store before it was [[Store|shut down]].
 
  
 
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[[Category:Comics with lowercase text]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Joe Biden]]
 

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