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The easiest story about American parties is also the least helpful: that Democrats and Republicans simply “flipped.” We take you past that cliché and into the moving parts that actually reshape coalitions—where parties win, what they believe, and who stands with them. With Dr. Beienberg back for our series finale, we connect 19th-century moral politics to modern social debates, show how FDR’s New Deal turned federalism into the defining party divide, and explain why New England and the Pacific Coast began voting like cousins. We start with geography that tells a human story: migration from New England into the Pacific Northwest, secularization replacing Puritan roots, and a South that evolves from Democratic dominance to Republican strength. Then we zoom in on ideology, highlighting the GOP’s long thread of moral traditionalism, business-friendly policy, and colorblind legal equality, contrasted with the Democrats’ larger pivot toward a strong federal role, welfare programs, and compensatory justice after the 1930s. Along the way, we define swing states in plain language and revisit platform planks that keep resurfacing: ballot integrity, immigration anxiety, anti-monopoly themes, and debates over national versus state power. Finally, we unpack demographics without resorting to stereotypes. Marriage and religiosity often predict more than broad labels, and cross-pressures within Catholic, Protestant, and secular voters help explain why coalitions reshuffle. Social issues from the 1960s onward—abortion, marriage, environmentalism—reordered loyalties, while immigration split business, labor, and cultural blocs inside both parties. The result isn’t a tidy flip; it’s continuity inside change, shaped by platforms, courts, culture, and lived experience. If you want to see the pattern for yourself, go read party platforms through the 1930s—they’re short, vivid, and revealing. If this guide sharpened how you see American party history, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review with the continuity or shift that surprised you most. Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum (https://civics.asu.edu/civic-literacy...) ! School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership (https://scetl.asu.edu/) Center for American Civics (https://civics.asu.edu/)