What is another word for party politics?

Pronunciation: [pˈɑːti pˈɒlətˌɪks] (IPA)

Party politics is a term that refers to the way in which political parties operate within a political system. There are several synonyms for this term, including partisan politics, political partisanship, and political polarization. All of these terms refer to the way in which political parties vie for power and influence within a political system. Party politics can be a divisive force, as political parties often prioritize their own interests over the interests of the broader public. Nevertheless, political parties are an essential element of modern democracy, as they provide citizens with a means of influencing political decision-making and holding elected officials accountable for their actions.

What are the hypernyms for Party politics?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Party politics

  • Compromise makes a good umbrella, but a poor roof; it is temporary expedient, often wise in party politics, almost sure to be unwise in statesmanship.
    James Russell Lowell
  • I have tried to draw attention to South Korea’s dangerous state-loyalty deficit, by which I mean citizens’ lack of a sense of identification with their republic. In doing so I have noted the obvious parallels with South Vietnam, another state fatally weakened by nationalism. On this point too, I seem to be talking to the wall. Even Americans interested in the nuclear crisis feel no need to learn about party politics in South Korea. It’s a thriving, prosperous democracy, and that’s all that matters.
    Brian Reynolds Myers
  • Nationalists were gratified by [ Franz von Papen’s ] policy of making an end of party politics and of liberalism; the state began to be authoritarian, despotic… All that united it was the negative purpose of breaking with the past system. Its two main sections, representing the industrialists and the big landowners, were directly opposed to one another on first principles: the industrialists were for free trade and unrestricted capitalist competition; the landowners were for ‘autarchy,” neo-mercantilism. ‘Enlightened capitalism’ on one side, pre-capitalist patriarchalism or post-capitalist economic planning on the other. But the great new forces of the Nationalism and Socialism were unrepresented.
    Hermann Rauschning
  • Many modifications in private and public life took place. Privacy ceasing to exist, all new houses were glass-built, curtains abolished, walls pulled down. Police went, the entire legal structure vanished overnight — a man does not litigate against himself. A parody of Parliament remained, to deal with foreign affairs, but party politics, elections, leaders in newspapers (even newspapers themselves) were scrapped.
    Brian Aldiss

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