Friday, February 12, 2010

How is the United States more of a ';Federalist'; nation than a ';Republican'; nation?

';Federalist'; as in the Federalist party established by Alexander Hamilton and ';Republican'; such as the Democratic-Republican party lead by Thomas Jefferson... and I meant to imply how is it this way in today's timeHow is the United States more of a ';Federalist'; nation than a ';Republican'; nation?
Federalist favor a strong, centralized government while Republicans believe that government should be smaller and have less control over state and social affairs. During the Bush administration there was much deregulation of many government influences built up during the Democratic Bill Clinton area. Republicans reduce government because they believe that American's should control their own destiny and take care of themselves. Federalist tend are heavy with regulation because they believe they are protecting everyone's interests whether they like it or not. Obama's health care reform, with a social option, the government's bail-out programs are examples of moving toward a Federalist approach where the government is expanding it's influence on previously untouched territory.How is the United States more of a ';Federalist'; nation than a ';Republican'; nation?
Federalists backed a policy of encouraging manufacturing and trade, while the D/R was more oriented towards promoting agricultural interests.

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