The New Deal Coalition was the alliance of voting blocs (labor unions, urban working-class voters, farmers, African Americans, and white Southerners) that backed FDR's Democratic Party starting in 1932, producing a party realignment that kept Democrats dominant for decades.
The New Deal Coalition is the textbook example of what happens after a critical election. When the Great Depression wrecked the economy, the election of 1932 swept Franklin D. Roosevelt into office and pulled a huge, diverse set of groups into the Democratic Party at the same time. Labor unions, urban working-class voters (many of them immigrants), farmers, African Americans (who had voted Republican since Lincoln), and white Southerners all lined up behind FDR because the New Deal promised government action on their economic problems.
For AP Gov, the coalition matters less as a history fact and more as a model of how parties work. Parties are coalitions of groups, and when a crisis shuffles which groups belong to which party, that's a realignment. The New Deal Coalition held the Democratic Party together (sometimes awkwardly, since Black voters and segregationist Southerners were in the same party) from the 1930s until it cracked apart in the 1960s over civil rights, opening the door to today's regional alignments.
This term lives in Unit 5 (Political Participation), in the topics on political parties and how and why parties change. The CED expects you to explain how parties adapt to candidates, voter coalitions, and changing demographics, and the New Deal Coalition is the go-to evidence for that. It's the clearest example of a critical election (1932) triggering realignment, and its later breakup explains the modern regional alignment where the South votes Republican. It also gives you a baseline for contrasting old-style party loyalty with today's candidate-centered campaigns. The exam loves before-and-after comparisons, and this coalition is the "before" in almost all of them.
Keep studying AP Gov Unit 5
Critical Elections and Realignment (Unit 5)
The election of 1932 is the classic critical election, and the New Deal Coalition is what the realignment actually produced. If a question asks for an example of voter coalitions durably switching parties, this is your answer.
Candidate-Centered Campaigns (Unit 5)
The coalition era ran on party loyalty, with the party organization delivering whole blocs of voters. Modern campaigns flip that model, using data and personalized messaging to target individuals. The exam uses the New Deal Coalition as the contrast case for this shift.
Divided Government (Unit 5 / Unit 2)
While the coalition held, Democrats controlled Congress for most of five decades, so unified government was the norm. Once the coalition collapsed and the South realigned, divided government became routine, which reshapes how presidents and Congress bargain.
Great Depression and the Growth of Federal Power (Unit 1 / Unit 5)
The coalition formed around New Deal programs, which expanded the federal government's role in the economy. That ideological commitment to active government still defines what the Democratic Party stands for today.
On the AP Gov exam, the New Deal Coalition shows up in multiple-choice questions about party change. One common stem asks how the election of 1932 functioned as a critical election that reshaped the Democratic Party. Another asks you to contrast the coalition's geographic and class-based loyalty with modern parties' data-driven, personalized voter targeting, which tests whether you understand the move to candidate-centered politics. No released FRQ requires this term verbatim, but it's strong evidence for an Argument Essay or concept application question about how parties adapt over time. The skill being tested isn't reciting who was in the coalition. It's explaining what its formation and breakup show about realignment.
Realignment is the process, and the New Deal Coalition is a product of that process. Realignment means voter groups durably shifting their party loyalty, usually after a critical election. The New Deal Coalition is the specific alliance the 1932 realignment created. Don't use the terms interchangeably; the coalition is the example, realignment is the concept the CED actually names.
The New Deal Coalition was the alliance of labor unions, urban workers, farmers, African Americans, and white Southerners that supported FDR's Democratic Party starting in 1932.
The election of 1932 was a critical election because it triggered a realignment, durably shifting these groups into the Democratic column for roughly three decades.
The coalition held parties together through group loyalty and geography, which contrasts sharply with today's candidate-centered, data-driven campaigns.
The coalition fractured in the 1960s over civil rights, pushing white Southern voters toward the Republican Party and producing today's regional alignments.
On the exam, use the New Deal Coalition as concrete evidence whenever a question asks how or why political parties change over time.
It was the alliance of voting groups (labor unions, urban working-class voters, farmers, African Americans, and white Southerners) that supported Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Democratic Party beginning with the 1932 election. It serves as AP Gov's main example of a voter coalition formed by realignment.
No. The coalition broke apart in the 1960s, largely over civil rights, when many white Southern voters left the Democratic Party. Its collapse is just as testable as its formation because it explains modern regional alignments.
Realignment is the general process of voter groups durably switching party loyalty after a critical election. The New Deal Coalition is the specific result of the 1932 realignment. Think process versus product.
Because it permanently reshuffled party coalitions. African Americans, union workers, and urban voters shifted to the Democrats and stayed there, giving the party dominance in national politics for decades. A critical election changes who votes for whom long-term, not just who wins once.
Yes, it appears in Unit 5 questions about political parties and how they change. Multiple-choice questions often ask you to contrast the coalition's group-based party loyalty with modern data-driven, candidate-centered campaigning.
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