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Bipartisanship In Politics

577 Words3 Pages

Despite the intentions of founding father George Washington to create a political system with the absence of dividing political parties, political and civic discourse in the United States has become increasingly aggressive and partisan throughout American history. From the first polarizing election of 1800 between former presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson to the unforgettable 2016 election where many independent voters struggled to choose between candidates the political environment in the United States has become increasingly hostile. While it is faulty logic to believe the two-party system alone has led to an upheaval of bipartisanship, it unfortunately is a main cause in the increasing political polarization and civilian disapproval in American politics. However, the current American political attitude could be changed through the application of deidentified politics and the creation of party platforms unique to each particular candidate. …show more content…

Through this method ideas and policies are stripped of party identity and labels; consequently, allowing them to be debated at core levels of personal morality and allowing bills to be debated purely through a delegate model of representation. The ultimate idea is to determine where common values exist but are currently masked by political rhetoric and identity in order to find common themes between political parties; therefore, promoting the advancement of debates purely based on core values. Ideas should not be debated on the basis of the party they originated from but rather as individual ideas to be debated fairly by those from different perspectives. Hopefully the return on this application is civility amongst those in different political parties by displaying ideas as neither liberal nor conservative but rather as societal

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