Jacksonian democracy

Jacksonian Democrats
Historical leadersAndrew Jackson
Martin Van Buren
James K. Polk
Thomas Hart Benton
Stephen A. Douglas
Founded1825 (1825)
Dissolved1854 (1854)
Split fromDemocratic-Republican Party
Preceded byJeffersonian Republicans
Old Republicans
Merged intoDemocratic Party
IdeologyAgrarianist pro-slaverism
Anti-corruption
Anti-elitism
Civic engagement
Classical liberalism
Jeffersonianism
Direct democracy
Majority rule
Manifest destiny
Populism
Spoils system
Strict constructionism
Universal white male suffrage
Utilitarianism
Factions
Radicalism
Conservatism
National affiliationDemocratic Party (after 1828)
Jacksonian Era
1829–1854
Andrew Jackson
President(s)Andrew Jackson
Martin Van Buren
William Henry Harrison
John Tyler
James K. Polk
Key eventsTrail of Tears
Indian removal
Nullification crisis
Second Great Awakening
Westward expansion
Mexican–American War
Prelude to the Civil War
Chronology
Era of Good Feelings Greater Reconstruction

Jacksonian democracy, also known as Jacksonianism, was a 19th-century political ideology in the United States that restructured a number of federal institutions. Originating with the seventh U.S. president, Andrew Jackson and his supporters, it became the nation's dominant political worldview for a generation. The term itself was in active use by the 1830s.

This era, called the Jacksonian Era or Second Party System by historians and political scientists, lasted roughly from Jackson's 1828 presidential election until the practice of slavery became the dominant issue with the passage of the Kansas–Nebraska Act in 1854 and the political repercussions of the American Civil War dramatically reshaped American politics. It emerged when the long-dominant Democratic-Republican Party became factionalized around the 1824 presidential election. Jackson's supporters began to form the modern Democratic Party. His political rivals John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay created the National Republican Party, which would afterward combine with other anti-Jackson political groups to form the Whig Party.

Broadly speaking, the era was characterized by a democratic spirit. It built upon Jackson's equal political policy, subsequent to ending what he termed a monopoly of government by elites. Even before the Jacksonian era began, suffrage had been extended to a majority of white male adult citizens, a result which the Jacksonians celebrated. Jacksonian democracy also promoted the strength of the presidency and the executive branch at the expense of Congress, while also seeking to broaden the public's participation in government. The Jacksonians demanded elected, not appointed, judges and rewrote many state constitutions to reflect the new values. In national terms, they favored geographical expansionism, justifying it in terms of manifest destiny.

Jackson's expansion of democracy was exclusively limited to White men, as well as voting rights in the nation were extended to adult white males only, and "it is a myth that most obstacles to the suffrage were removed only after the emergence of Andrew Jackson and his party. Well before Jackson's election most states had lifted most restrictions on the suffrage or white male citizens or taxpayers." There was also little to no improvement, and in many cases a reduction of the rights of non-white U.S citizens, during the extensive period of Jacksonian democracy, spanning from 1829 to 1860.