Primary Elections How do we choose the party’s candidate?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Selecting a President:
Advertisements

The Executive Branch.
Campaign Financing and Election Outcome
Elections and Voting.
Warm-up: Answer the following question on your warm-up page. How many times have your parents voted for the president?
Understanding the The Road to the Presidency
LEARNING OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT
LEARNING OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT
3/26 Warm Up During the President’s State of the Union address to the nation, a massive meteor hits the Capitol building killing the Pres., VP, & the.
Presidential Primaries: How Iowa, New Hampshire, and Weird Rules Determine Who Wins.
Selecting a President: The Presidential Nomination and Election Process.
Chapter 13 Notes: “The Presidency”. Part A: Section 13.1: The President’s Roles  Write the underlined words on the extra spaces in your packet.
Interactive Notes: How were candidates chosen in the past?
2008 Presidential Election John McCain vs. Barack Obama.
Selecting a President 2012: Primaries & Caucuses.
Selecting a President:
2008 US Presidential Election Part 1 Democratic Convention Denver Aug January – June State-by-stateGeneral Election Delegate selection November.
Selecting a President: Primaries & Caucuses.  Stage 1: Caucuses & Primaries The Battle for the Party Faithful  Stage 2: Nominating Conventions “Glorified.
Running for POTUS Caucus – Document drafted every four years by each party stating the policy positions of the party –General party-wide issue stances.
Chapter 13 Notes: “The Presidency”
The Road to the White House
Presidential elections. How often? Fixed term elections every 4 years 2-term limit for individual president According to Article II the election should.
Understanding the The Road to the Presidency. Put the following steps in the “Road to the Presidency” in sequential order National Conventions Debates.
Election Calendar EVENTPurposeDate 1. Primaries and Caucuses in each state and U.S. territory (ex. Republican Primary of 2012) Mitt Romney (42). Republican.
Selecting a President: The Presidential Nomination and Election Process.
Election Process Nomination Campaigns Invisible Primary Initial Contests Mist Clearing The National Convention National Election.
Take a Guess! We elected a new president in November We were voting for John McCain from the Republican Party or Barack Obama from the Democrat Party.
Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 10. How does a candidate gain a party’s nomination for President? Nomination  Official endorsement of a candidate for.
About the Poll The Washington Poll is a non-partisan, academic survey research project sponsored by the Washington Institute for the Study of Ethnicity.
The Republican Primaries. Office Hours When – Today – Wednesday 10-2 Doyle 226B.
The Election! I) Nominating the President A) Primaries are held in ¾ of states so that party voters can show their preference and /or select delegates.
Chapter 10 Page 252. Vocabulary political party is a group of citizens with similar views on public issues that work together. nominate means to select.
V&E #14 Primary Elections How do we choose the party’s candidate?
Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 7.3. How does a candidate gain a party’s nomination for President? Nomination  Official endorsement of a candidate.
Nominating Candidates Chapter 16, Section 3 pg. 464.
Selecting a President 2016: Primaries & Caucuses elections/videos/primaries-caucuses-and-conventions.
What is.... The Republican Candidates Ron Paul Rick Santorum Mitt Romney Newt Gingrich.
FrontPage: OL 8.2 on your desk. Last Word: Read/OL 17.3 for Tuesday.
How the President is Elected
Step 1. Meet Eligibility Guidelines Set by the US Constitution Step 2. Test the Water: Pre-Candidacy ProcessTest the Water: Pre-Candidacy Process Step.
Elections. Primaries  Prior to the mid 1900s, party leaders chose candidates for elections.  Reformers wished for the public to have a greater role.
Bell Ringer!!! Take the question sheet from the shelf and write your name on it. –This will go along with the Student News Daily article I will hand out.
Road to the White House. Decision to Run  Press conference or other announcement… a person decides to run and “throws his hat into the ring”  Need money,
Selecting a President: Nominating Conventions.  Stage 1: Caucuses & Primaries The Battle for the Party Faithful  Stage 2: Nominating Conventions “Glorified.
STAGES FOR SELECTING A PRESIDENT. STAGE I: PRIMARY AND CAUCUS A.Primary *Most states use the primary elections method *it is a 1-day statewide election.
Nominations, Elections, & Campaigns AP US Government Lacks.
Presidential Election Process in the United States Stephen Marty 28 May 2012.
Presidential Election – 2008 V. Martinez. What are primaries?  Wikipedia says :  A primary election (nominating primary) is an election in which voters.
Focus Question Rising campaign costs have led to: A.Some candidates dropping out due to inadequate international funding. B.Term limits for those borrowing.
Nominating Presidential Candidates A Public Process Conducted by
Selecting a President 2012:
Presidential Election
Presidential Nomination Phase
Political Parties.
Chapter 9 Political Parties.
Selecting a President:
Development of American Political Parties
TYPES OF ELECTIONS.
TYPES OF ELECTIONS.
Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 4
Money, Money, Money Does money equal power?.
Selecting a President:
Correct Answer? A state has 11 electoral votes. In a presidential election, the Democratic candidate receives 48 percent of that state’s popular vote,
Paying for Election Campaigns
Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 4
Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 4
Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 4
The Road to the White House
Voting and Elections Chapter 10 Sections 1 and 2.
Who Are The Candidates.
Presentation transcript:

Primary Elections How do we choose the party’s candidate?

Primary Elections Each political party must pick ONE person to become the nominee Republicans chose among… Rudy Guiliani Fred Thompson John McCain Mitt Romney Mike Huckabee

Registered Democrats' choice for nominee for 2008* Clinton 39% Obama 20% Edwards 15% Gore 13% Richardson 4% Kucinich 3% Biden 2% Gravel 1% Dodd ** Who’s Winning? Latest Polls (October 2007) Registered Republicans' choice for nominee for 2008* Giuliani 27% F. Thompson 26% McCain 14% Romney 10% Gingrich 6% Huckabee 4% Tancredo 2% Brownback 1% Hunter 1% Paul 1%

2012 ? VERSUS

Power! Each state holds primary elections on different days over 6 months Historically: –Iowa & New Hampshire vote 1 st in January –Last state – June Generally winner of each party is determined in first few months

I wanna be first!!!! Frontloading: moving up primary election date Political parties set dates: Florida & Michigan moved their dates up too early & so votes were NOT counted!

Do the first states hold the most power? YES! They set the momentum / trend for the campaign, ppl w/few votes drop out NOT ALWAYS! In 2008, D’s couldn’t decide b/w Obama & Clinton and every single primary affected the outcome – winner wasn’t determined until June

Super Tuesday Tuesday in February in which many states (approx 20) all vote on same day to have a greater impact on primary outcome CA votes on this day

Should all 50 states hold their primary on the same day? YES! No one state would determine winner, all states treated equally NO! Candidates can focus on small area & connect w/local ppl, gives ppl a chance to see candidates over time / variety of situations / time to “dig up dirt”

Primary Ballots In primaries, vote for one party ONLY Ballot only has one party on it Democratic Presidential Candidates Pick only one.  Chris Dodd  Joe Biden  Barack Obama  Mike Gravel  Dennis Kucinich  Hillary Clinton OROR Republican Presidential Candidates Pick only one.  Sam Brownbeck  John McCain  Fred Thompson  Rudy Guiliani  Mitt Romney  Mike Huckabee

Primary Types Open Primary : –Vote for any party you want –Adv: –Dis: Closed Primary –Vote only for the party you registered with –Adv –Dis

Should all states use the closed primary?

National Convention Late summer Each state sends a group, called a delegation, to their parties’ National Convention 1.Official nominee 2.Platform determined Each delegation is now forced to vote for the person who won the primary in that state (1968) = Direct Primary

Superdelegates – party members, usually elected officials who can vote according to their own opinion (D’s only!) –Many worried that the D nominee would NOT be chosen by the voters but these SUPER delegates!

Primary Power Before 1960s, indirect primaries: votes were only a suggestion and party members would have final say Parties have lost power w/direct primary

Should we return to the indirect primary?

Campaign! After Convention, campaign for office begins (late August – Nov) General Election: November –Determines winner

Party Centered Campaigns: DEcentralized parties – power is divided at national, local & state levels NATIONAL Committees (RNC, DNC): –Organize the elections: GOTV (Get Out The Vote): Register ppl to vote, call, mailers, etc –Organize National Conventions Service Relationship – parties support candidates but cannot force them to do much

Cont’d STATE Committees – LOCAL : –Precincts: local voting district –Grassroots level

Candidate Centered Campaigns Candidates determine the issues & “flow” of the election Packaging the candidate – likeability factor Air wars: media fight ($$$) –News –Commercials: rapid response Do negative ads help or hinder? 008http:// 008 –Debates

Web wars –Web pages –How effective? Ground wars Swing voters: independents who could choose either party Battleground states OR Swing states: states that are fairly split b/w the 2 parties

Adv / Dis of Candidate Centered Campaigns –Chance for a newcomer, party outsider –Flexible to changing issues and events –Makes local issues a priority  –Personality contests –$$$ plays a large role, too large? –Don’t have to take blame for Washington, they are still an “outsider”

Electoral College: only for the Pres/VP Elections In 48/50 states, the winner of the popular vote receives all of the states’ electoral votes = # of ppl state send to Congress In CA – 55 EV –3,000,000 popular votes for R –3,000,001 popular votes for D –Winner takes all 55 votes!

Election Timeline 1.Announce 1.Announce you’re running 2.Campaign 2.Campaign: a)Focus on the states that vote first! b)Raise money! Primary Elections 3.Win the Primary Elections 4.National Convention a)Old days: party had ultimate decision in nominee b)Now: People’s votes determine the nominee 5.One-on-one 5.One-on-one campaign: R v. D 6.General Election 1.Picks the winner 2.November