The New Democrats represent a movement within the United States Democratic Party which is identified with moderate positions on political issues, especially fiscal issues. They are often identified with the Democratic Leadership Council, which was strengthened when Ronald Reagan attracted many previously-Democratic voters in his 1980s campaigns against Jimmy Carter and especially Walter Mondale. New Democrats saw the defeats of Carter and Mondale as proof not that the majority of the electorate in the United States had been truly converted to conservatism, but rather just that it had rejected the excesses that it had come to associate with the traditional Democratic version of liberalism. The respected opinion journal The New Republic has been associated with the movement as it generally takes moderate-to-liberal views on social issues, but was associated since the 1970s with a vigorously anti-Communist, and now anti-radical Islamist, foreign policy.
Bill Clinton is the single Democratic politician of recent years most identified with the New Democrats; his promise of welfare reform in the 1992Presidential campaign and its subsequent enactment were classic New Democrat positions; so was his 1992 promise of a middle-class tax cut. New Democrats tend to be less linked with labor unions than do previous leadership groups within the party.
New Democrat successes under Clinton are largely regarded to be the inspiration for Tony Blair in the United Kingdom and his moderate policies, which he explicitly refers to as "New Labour".
The NewDemocratic Party (NDP) is a political party in Canada with a social democratic philosophy and moderate democraticsocialist tendencies that contests elections at both the federal and provincial levels.
In 1989, the QuebecNewDemocratic Party adopted a sovereigntist platform and severed its ties with the federal NDP.
In Quebec, the QuebecNewDemocratic Party and the federal NDP agreed in 1989 to sever their structural ties after the Quebec party adopted a sovereigntist platform.
The newDemocratic Party of Jackson and Van Buren resembled its precursor, the Democratic-Republican Party, where geography was concerned (both were strong in New York City and Virginia, and weak in New England).
The Democrats were split over entering Iraq in 2003 and increasingly expressed concerns about both the justification and progress of the War on Terrorism and the domestic effects, including threats to civil rights and civil liberties, from the USA PATRIOT Act.
Civil libertarians also often support the Democratic Party because its positions on such issues as civil rights and separation of church and state are more closely aligned to their own than the positions of the Republican Party, and because the Democrats' economic agenda may be more appealing to them than that of the Libertarian Party.