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The Election Process
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The Nominating Process
The Critical First Step Nomination General elections Self-Announcement Caucus Originally very practical Closed & unrepresentative
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Conventions Hierarchical structure Local County State National
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Why did conventions decline
Corruption Criminals Disreputable individuals
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Types of primaries Direct Primary Closed primary Open primary
Party members only Declaration at registration Open primary Any qualified voter can take part Private or public declaration of party Blanket primary Can perform straight or split ticket voting
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Closed v. Open Closed Open It prevents one party from nominating weaker candidates in the other party Makes candidates more responsive to the party, platform and members It helps make voters more thoughtful because they must choose between the parties to vote. Compromises secrecy Excludes independents. Voters don’t have to make party known Independents are included Permits raiding of parties Reduces party loyalty
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Other Primaries Run Off Non Partisan
Held when there is no winner of majority vote Two top vote getters face each other Non Partisan Candidates – no labels
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Evaluation of the primaries
Declaration of party Long ballots (bedsheet) Expenses Name familiarity
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Elections
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Elections Administration Federal control When elections are held
Early voting Absentee voting Coattail Effect
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Precincts and polling paces
Precinct: voting district Polling place – where voters actually vote Precinct Board Supervises voting process Precinct lines Fixes locations Picks members
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Casting the Ballot-types of ballots
How a voter registers a choice in an election. Now secret ballot Historically viva voce until 1800 Austrailian Ballot Printed at public expense Lists names of all candidates Polls/qualified voters
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Types of ballots continued
Office Group Ballot Party Column Ballot Sample Ballots Bedsheet Ballots
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Voting Machines Electronic Vote Counting Vote by Mail Elections
Online Voting
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Money and Elections
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Campaign Spending and Funding
Sources of funding Private and public sources Small donors Wealthy donors Candidates Non party groups Temporary organizations Why do they give money?
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Regulating Campaign Finance
Federal laws Federal Election Commission Disclosure requirements Limit on contributions PAC Contributions Limits on expenditures Public Funding of Presidential Campaigns
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Hard Money Soft Money Money spent to elect Money spent for candidates party building activities
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