Election 2008: To Vote or Not to Vote

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Amendments: 13 th, 14 th, 15 th, 17 th, 19 th, 23 rd, 24 th, and 26 th.
Advertisements

Chapter 11 Voting & Elections.
History of Suffrage Suffrage – right to vote (Franchise) 1776:  Male  White  Over age 21  Land Owning  Literate  Passed Religious test  Paid Tax.
Expanding Voting Rights Mr. Young American Government
Political Participation Nonvoting Rise of the American Electorate.
Political Participation Chapter 4. Woman’s Suffrage ’s birthed out of the abolition movement : Legislation narrowly failed to approve suffrage.
The Electoral College Chapter 23 Section 3.
 Overall people happy with the economy but disappointed with Clinton’s personal behavior  Republican nomination was between George W. Bush & John.
Voting in the U.S.. Today’s Goals  Trace how and why the electorate has expanded throughout our history.  Analyze the election process in America (figure.
Supreme Court Decisions & Amendments Review. 13 th Amendment Abolition (elimination) of slavery.
By: Gavin Liddick.  At that age, most teenagers can work, pay taxes, drive and be charged as adults for crimes DEATH  They can even be sentenced to.
Tuesday, January 12 Please sit and take something out to write with. Make sure you have your agenda for the week written down!
Being a Voter Ch. 23, Sec. 1 Pp General Elections Vote for candidates, new laws, constitutional amendments, and new taxes.
GOVERNMENT FINAL REVIEW Karissa Stolen Period 2. Liberals v. Conservatives LIBERALS - believe in government action to achieve equal opportunity and equality.
“The President and the Executive Branch”. The President’s Job.
Article II in the U.S. Constitution “the executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America”---U.S. Constitution.
Amendment 11(1798): Lawsuits Against a State 1 st enacted to override a Supreme Court decision No federal court may try a case in which a state is being.
When you come in… - Grab: - textbook notes foldable foldable.
Presidential Decisions: #28 Woodrow Wilson (D-NJ).
Chapter 17 Section 2 Expanding Voting Rights Mr. Young American Government.
CHAPTER 13 SECTION 4 Presidential Nominations. Starter.
The Electoral College GOAL: Evaluate the Electoral College system.
Guaranteeing Others’ Rights
“Who Can Vote?”.
“The President and the Executive Branch”
Do Now pg 21 What are the first 10 amendments called?
Part 1: Voting & Elections
Happy Thursday! Copy the agenda on the board– don’t forget the reminders! Get out your signed C2C trip letter & list of Presidents Reminders: C2C letter.
Tuesday, February 14th BoR Notes today amendments Current Events.
“The President and the Executive Branch”
Chapter 11.
“The President and the Executive Branch”
Voting Copy all of the notes that are in bold and any slides that state “copy slide” into your “notes” section of your notebook.
Political Participation
General Election Phase
Political Participation
Constitutional Amendments
How Amendments have Extended Suffrage
Elections.
Chapter 7 Our Enduring Constitution
Chapter 6-Section One The Right to Vote (pg )
Chapter 13: The Nominating Process Section 4
What were the major events of the George W. Bush presidency?
Elections and Voting.
“Elections”.
Ch. 11 (textbook) Voting & Elections.
TYPES OF ELECTIONS.
TYPES OF ELECTIONS.
Who can Vote? And Types of Elections
Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 4
Chapter 6: Voters and Voter Behavior
Voting in America.
Chapter 10: Political Campaigns And Elections.
Chapter 10 Political Campaigns and Elections
Party Conventions Nominate party presidential candidates
America Enters a New Century
“The President and the Executive Branch”
The U. S. Constitution Amendments
Commission/City Manager Plans
“The President and the Executive Branch”
Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 4
“The President and the Executive Branch”
Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 4
Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 4
Unit 5 - Elections.
Voting & Elections Chapter 9.
“The President and the Executive Branch”
Tuesday, Jan. 12 Please pick up an outline from the front table and get out something to write with. Let’s get ready to Boogie! Please get out your Presidential.
Happy Thursday Materials – Pen/Pencil and Binder
“Voting and Elections”
Presentation transcript:

Election 2008: To Vote or Not to Vote

Election History

The 1st Democracies Ancient Greece had one of the earliest forms of democracy, since at least 508 BC. Each year, the Greeks had a negative election -- voters were asked to cast a vote for the politician they most wanted to exile for ten years.

By the 13th Century in Venice They elected a Great Council of 40 members . Venetians introduced "approval voting": Electors cast one vote for every candidate they find acceptable and None for those whom they deem unacceptable. The winner is the person who is acceptable to the largest number of voters

Voting in America is a story of ever-increasing voting rights. The rules for eligibility have changed substantially since America's founding, and continue to change today.

The Rules! When America was young, only white males over the age of 21 were allowed to vote. Some of the landmark changes since then are:

Black Suffrage or right to vote The 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution were passed following the Civil War, in the later 1860s. They outlawed slavery and extended civil rights and suffrage (voting rights) to former slaves. The LEGAL right to vote for African-Americans was established,

Black Suffrage or right to vote but numerous restrictions kept many blacks from ACTUALLY voting until the 1960s Voting Rights Act

Woman’s Suffrage The 19th Amendment gave American women the right to vote in 1920. Women still lacked the right to vote in Switzerland until the 1970s, and as of 1990 women could not vote in Kuwait.

Presidential Election 2008 Who is allowed to vote in a presidential election in the United States of America?

Current Issues Thanks to a movement led by differently-abled Americans and their supporters, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 was passed. It provided for ballot and poll access for those with disabilities. Enforcement of the Voting Rights Act and other laws continued.

More Current Issues After the 2000 election, the nation was confronted with over a million ballots never being counted, and numerous allegations of fraud in Florida and elsewhere. The courts forced the recount in Florida to stop, and it was only months later (right after the September 11 attacks, so few were listening)that recounters hired by major news organizations found that if all the valid, machine-rejected votes had been counted, the man occupying the White House would have lost the election

Election 2008 Election Day occurs on the Tuesday following the first Monday of November every year. Election Day is Tuesday, November 04, 2008 this year.

US Presidential Election The 2008 Presidential Election process began in January, with state primaries.

John McCain emerged as the Republican nominee, and

Barack Obama won for the Democrats.

New President of the USA The General Election will be November 4, 2008. How many will vote? Who will be elected?