democratic progressive party

listen to the pronunciation of democratic progressive party
English - Turkish

Definition of democratic progressive party in English Turkish dictionary

DPP
(Askeri) veri yama paneli; dağıtılmış üretim programı (data patch panel; distributed production program)
English - English

Definition of democratic progressive party in English English dictionary

Democratic Party
Any of several political parties, worldwide, that have democratic principles
Democratic Party
The more liberal of two main political parties in the United States, see
Democratic Progressive Party.
DPP
Democratic Party
One of the two major political parties in the United States, owing its origin to a split in the Democratic-Republican Party under Andrew Jackson in 1828. the Democratic Party one of the two main political parties of the US the Republican Party. One of the two major political parties in the U.S., historically the party of labour, minorities, and progressive reformers. In the 1790s a group of Thomas Jefferson's supporters called themselves "Democratic Republicans" or "Jeffersonian Republicans" to demonstrate their belief in the principle of popular government and their opposition to monarchism. The party adopted its present name in the 1830s, during the presidency of Andrew Jackson. Democrats won nearly every presidential election in the years 1836-60, but the issue of slavery split the party. The Southern Democrats called for the protection of slavery in the new territories, whereas the Northern Democrats, led by Stephen A. Douglas, advocated allowing each territory to decide by popular sovereignty whether to accept slavery within its borders. As a result, in 1860 the new antislavery Republican Party won its first national victory under Abraham Lincoln. From 1861 to 1913 the only Democratic president was Grover Cleveland; in these years the party was basically conservative and agrarian-oriented, and its members were opposed to protective tariffs. It returned to power under Woodrow Wilson, instituting greater federal regulation of banking and industry, but the Republicans' frank embrace of big business drew voters amid the prosperity of the 1920s. Democrats became dominant again in 1932, electing Franklin D. Roosevelt. A coalition of urban workers, small farmers, liberals, and others sustained Democrats in office until 1953, and the party regained the presidency with the election of John F. Kennedy in 1960. In the 1970s and '80s the Democrats held the presidency only during the single term of Jimmy Carter (1976-81) but retained majority control of the House of Representatives. They regained the presidency in 1992 with the election of Bill Clinton but lost control of both the House and the Senate in 1994. In the presidential election of 2000, Clinton's vice president, Al Gore, was defeated by Republican George W. Bush. In 2004 the party's presidential nominee, John Kerry, was defeated by Bush, and the Democrats lost seats in both houses of Congress. The modern Democratic Party generally supports a strong federal government with powers to regulate business and industry in the public interest; federally financed social services and benefits for the poor, the unemployed, the aged, and other groups; and the protection of civil rights
Democratic Party
one of two of the largest political parties in the U.S. (the more leftist party)
democratic party
the older of two major political parties in the United States
democratic progressive party

    Hyphenation

    de·mo·cra·tic Pro·gres·sive par·ty

    Turkish pronunciation

    demıkrätîk prıgresîv pärti

    Pronunciation

    /ˌdeməˈkratək prəˈgresəv ˈpärtē/ /ˌdɛməˈkrætɪk prəˈɡrɛsɪv ˈpɑːrtiː/
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