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factionalism
[ fak-shuh-nl-iz-uhm ]
noun
- a condition in which a group, organization, government, etc., is split into two or more smaller groups with differing and often opposing opinions or interests:
Because of factionalism within the student community, only one-third of the students are officially striking.
His term as director would prove difficult on occasion, primarily because of the factionalism and the poisonous relationships among some of the members.
Word History and Origins
Origin of factionalism1
Example Sentences
Vatican watchers noted Francis’ determination to sweep clean institutions that had become rife with dysfunction, factionalism and accusations of corruption.
The Achilles’ heel of large democracies—their very diversity, if channeled into blind factionalism—could become the instrument of their undoing.
The irony stings: In preserving Washington’s unifying legacy, perhaps those words that could have unified Americans in a more important way—against the very factionalism now threatening our republic—were erased.
These excised lines from the Farewell Address serve not only as a warning but as a prescient prophecy of the political turmoil and factionalism that would later shape the nation’s history.
Law professor Gregory Elinson observes that “intraparty conflict can immunize our constitutional system from the pathologies that arise when partisan warfare is overlayed on the Madisonian model of separated institutions sharing power... Today, as was true at the Founding, Americans have no great love for intraparty conflict or party factionalism.”
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