Is the RNC and DNC monopolies?

Cataphract@lemmy.ml to No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world – 13 points –

I thought about this in response to a comment someone made and postured a position in which the RNC and DNC are really just two monopoly companies at this point (link). I know there's protection for political parties, but is that what these really are now with how they're structured (kinda like they're ticketmaster/livenation for politicians at this point)? I couldn't find an easy answer and trying to dive deeper keeps pulling up irrelevant articles.

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The term would be a Duopoly.

Looking at an entire political spectrum and there being only a Duopoly is heart breaking. But I meant more like each one is a true "business monopoly" for it's own perspective market/party. Controlling exposure, funding, data, candidate selection, being generally a lobbying middleman group, at what point does this become less a "political ideological group" and more a business organization that focuses heavily on political candidates? (like a sign manufacturer is technically making political content, but they're still just a business, they're both providing a service or product to individuals).

This is not so much a focus on political parties or ideologies, but more the NC (national committee) portion of it. I understand state political parties. But when expanded to the national committee's of those parties, how are those organizations not considered a monopoly for their parties centralizing and controlling the state level and have completely overtaken national decisions which can effect the state level as well.