Focus: On the Playing Field - Practicing American Politics
In practice there are only two parties on the national level in the U.S., the Republicans and the Democrats. Why?
Read about this on pp. 193-209 in Access to English: Social Studies, and then work with the tasks in the textbook and here on the website.
What Americans think of President Trump's first year in office
Trump supporter in Florida, a mother relying on the ACA, an Asian American college student, a DACA recipient and a transgender service member describe their lives in the whirlwind of 2017.
How do executive orders work?
Full lesson linked below.
Listening
Articles and Resources
Going Further
Links
-
The Republican Party (GOP)
(gop.com) -
The Democratic Party
(democrats.org) -
Democrat vs. Republican
(diffen.com) -
Politics: issues (NPR)
(npr.org) -
Big Political Data: Polls
(isidewith.com) -
Obamacare: News (MSNBC)
(msnbc.com) -
Obamacare: News (Independent)
(independent.co. uk) -
Obamacare: News (Politico)
(politico.com) -
Why Donald Trump attacks the media (BBC News)
(bbc.co. uk) -
'Disgusting news': Donald Trump whips up crowd anger as he vilifies media (Guardian)
(theguardian.com) -
Immigration Surges to Top of Most Important Problem List (Gallup)
(news.gallup. com) -
Record-High 75% of Americans Say Immigration Is Good Thing (Gallup)
(news.gallup. com) -
How Immigration Became So Controversial (Atlantic)
(theatlantic.com) -
Animation: Gerrymandering: How drawing jagged lines can impact an election (TedED)
(ed.ted. com) -
American democracy is in crisis, and not just because of Trump (Guardian)
(theguardian.com)