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Third party (United States) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Third party - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Third party may refer to: ; Politics • Third party (politics), party other than one of the two dominant ones in a two-party political system • Third party (United States), in American politics • Thir...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_party |
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The Legal Term * Third Parties * Defined & Explained ... THIRD PARTIES - This term includes all persons who are not parties to the contract, agrement or instrument of writing, by which their interest in the thing conveyed is sought to be affected.
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Britt Peterson's profile of Unity08's dream of a bipartisan presidential ticket demonstrates why third parties have such an uphill fight in America. Not only ... The three most successful third parties are the republican party (1856 114 EV and knocked Whig party out of action, won in 1860 became major party),
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Third parties often raise issues that major-party presidential candidates neglect, sometimes leading to substantial change in the public dialogue. Ross Perot, running on a platform that advocated reducing the federal budget deficit, received 19 percent of the vote in the 1992 election.
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America currently has five nationally organized third parties: Reform, Libertarian, Green, Constitution (formerly the U.S. Taxpayers), and Natural Law. Each of these five parties has received 100,000 votes or more for at least one of its candidates in the past 20 years.
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