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Congressional Results 2012
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Opportunities to discuss course content Thursday 10-2 Friday 10-12
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Learning Objectives Analyze the theories of why people vote and apply them to the 2012 Election. Evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of how presidential and congressional elections are financed.
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Goals of Congressperson The Primary Goal is to Get Elected The Next goal is to get re-elected (Mayhew, 1974)
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PARTISANSHIP AND TURNOUT
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Partisanship is Most Important The biggest factor in Congressional election Even in open seat elections
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Safe Seats Seat Maximization through Gerrymandering Majority Minority Districts
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Residential Self Selection
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INCUMBENCY Major Factor 2
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Incumbency Can Eclipse Partisanship in some places A resource that provides many benefits
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Incumbency The incumbent dominates the discourse The incumbent has the advantages It is the Incumbent’s seat to lose
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Incumbent Benefit #1 - Money Attract Money at Higher Rates The War Chest
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Incumbent Benefit #2 - Name Recognition We Vote For Who We Know What can Incumbents Do?
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Benefit 3 – Weak Challengers Run against Losers Scare off Good Challengers
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Spending My Own Money
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Voluntary Retirements When candidates leave office, rather than run for re-election. Why people Retire?
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Lose<Not Run<Win
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HOW INCUMBENTS CAN LOSE
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Stop Playing the Game Get too Old Become inattentive Scandal
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Strategic Challengers can Alter This They run when national trends favor their party They have local advantages as well They also have the most to lose!
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How Strategic Challengers Change Campaigns Attract Money Can turn National Issues into Local Ones Are Quality Challengers as Well
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What is a Quality Challenger A person who has formerly/currently held elective office Name Recognition, Access to Money, a constituuency
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INCUMBENCY IN THE HOUSE AND SENATE
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House Incumbency
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Senate Incumbency Senators are More vulnerable
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GOING INTO 2012
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Breakdown
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Not a Wave Election
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Why no wave? We hated Congress, but no one specifically The economy still wasn’t great The negative campaign Obama’s Popularity (too close to 50%)
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THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
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The Results (D+8)
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The Importance of Partisanship Republican Districts voted Republican, Democratic Districts voted Democratic Balanced districts split almost evenly
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Republican Exposure The Republicans had more exposure Very Few Toss-up Seats Probably would have survived a wave.
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The Democrats Actually Won the Nationwide Popular Vote Did not Take Back the House – Redistricting – Wasted Votes
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Winners and Losers 2012
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Redistricting The process of redrawing districts within a state State legislatures control the battle Very Political
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The Role of Redistricting A Result of the 2002 election GOP Legislatures controlled 202 seats Democratic Legislatures controlled 47 seats
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GOP Redistricting Tactics Create safer seats Remember the lesson of 2002
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Republicans Have A Structural Advantage Democrats are more compacted Democratic areas are overwhelmingly democratic Democrats are “safer”
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Regional Voting Democrats New England California West Coast Republicans South Upper Midwest
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Money and the House
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The 2014 Election Not Many Toss-up Seats Difficult to Reassemble Presidential Coalition 6 year Itch
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THE SENATE
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The Dynamics The More Incumbents you have, the more you have to Defend – 23 Democratic Seats – 10 Republican Seats Democrats have a 53-47 lead
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Where Were They?
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The Results
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What Explains the Results Incumbency Partisanship Candidate Factors
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Indiana Supposed to be safe GOP Richard Mourdock. The GOP Loses by 6%
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Missouri Clair McCaskill is very vulnerable Cross-over spending in the primary Todd Akin loses by 15%
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Massachusetts Elizabeth Warren vs. Scott Brown Warren outraises Brown by 14 million Brown is the only incumbent to lose
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Open Seats Maine North Dakota Montana
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A Banner Year for Political Money 1 Billion is Spent Outside Money is important, but not crucial
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Money isn’t Everything Self Financed candidates still lose Poor David Dewhurst
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Looking ahead to 2014 The Republicans expected to gain…they didn’t Democrats have More exposure 7 seats are from states where Obama won
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Can the Democrats Expand? Only 1 GOP Seat from a State where Obama Won Will the Republicans be “the stupid party”
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