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Published byPercival Fox Modified over 9 years ago
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AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
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THE ROLE OF CONVENTIONS The first method for political parties to nominate Presidential candidates was the Congressional caucus 1832—both major parties turned to the national convention CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS Convention system has been built entirely by political parties
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The national committee sets the date and picks the place Usually the party out of power has their convention first– usually July The President’s party convention is usually in August Major cities bid for the right to hold the convention because of the financial return
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THE APPORTIONMENT OF DELEGATES National committee determines how many delegates each state can send Complicated formulas award bonus delegates to states based on support in prior elections SELECTION OF DELEGATES State law and/or party rules fix the procedure for picking delegates in each State
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Republican Party leaves delegate selection to the State party Democratic Party has national rules to govern the selection process These rules attempt to broad participation for young people, African Americans, other minorities, and women
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PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES More than ¾ of all delegates come from States that hold Presidential Primaries PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY—an election in which a party’s voters: 1) choose some of all of a State party organization’s delegates to the national convention and/or 2) express a preference among various contenders for their party’s presidential nomination
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HISTORY OR THE PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY First appeared in early 1900s as part of the reform movement WI passed the first primary law in 1905 By 1916 nearly half the states had adopted primaries Primaries fell into dis-favor so that by 1968 only 16 states and D.C. had one In 2004—36 states, D.C., and Puerto Rico had primaries
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PRIMARIES TODAY State rules for primaries have been re-written several times over the years NH guards its status as having the first primary in the US Most states prefer to have their primary early so the most primaries are held before mid- March
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PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION Some primaries were winner-take-all The victor got all the delegates in that state Democratic Party has banned winner-take-all primaries Democrats have a complex PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION rule If a candidate gets at least 15% of the preference vote, they get a corresponding % of the delegates available Ex. Candidate A gets 45% of the vote. There are 100 delegates available. Candidate A would get 45 delegates. Most states had to change primary laws to get in line with Democrats’ proportional representation
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More than half the states now only hold a preference primary Delegates are chosen at party conventions EVALUATION OF THE PRIMARY Primary system complicated with confusing variations Primaries tend to democratize the delegate- selection process
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Primaries force would-be nominees to test their candidacies in actual political combat Key function of primaries: screen out lesser possibilities to the point where only one or a few contenders remain Few major contests for party in power because: 1) President is seeking re-election 2) President backs someone who is seeking re- election President regularly gets his way
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REFORM PROPOSALS 1) Do away with state primaries and have a national primary to chose the top candidates This would do away with conventions except to possibly pick a vice-presidential nominee 2) Have a series of regional primaries, held at two- or three-week intervals in groups of states Either of these proposals would require action from Congress, States, and political parties
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THE CAUCUS-CONVENTION PROCESS States without primaries choose their delegates by caucuses and conventions The caucus system is the oldest method used to pick national convention delegates Iowa caucuses tend to get the most attention because they are the first delegate-selection event every presidential cycle
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THE NATIONAL CONVENTION Three major goals: 1) naming the party’s presidential and vice- presidential candidates 2) bringing the various factions and the leading personalities in the party together in one place for a common purpose 3) adopting the party’s PLATFORM (a formal statement of basic principles, stands on major policy matters, and objectives for the campaign.
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TTHE FIRST TWO DAYS FFirst day: ---welcome delegates ---organize convention ---dozens of short speeches from various people SSecond Day: ---speeches continue ---adoption of the party platform ---delivery of the keynote address
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The platform is usually written by the party leadership before the convention and is presented as a report from the committee on platform and resolutions The KEYNOTE ADDRESS (major speech) is usually a barn-burner and given by one of the party’s most accomplished orators The speech follows a predictable pattern: glorify the party, its history, its leaders, and its programs, and blister the other party, and predict victory in November
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THE LAST TWO DAYS Nomination of candidates for Vice-President and President Presidential & Vice-Presidential candidates gives acceptance speeches
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WHO IS NOMINATED? Incumbent President make selection easy If there is no incumbent, as many as a dozen candidates may surface to run and usually 2 or 3 make it to the convention POLITICAL EXPERIENCE The person that is the most electable Extensive public record that is free of controversy Previous elective office preferred Exception: Eisenhower 1952
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Governorships of larger states have produced the most candidates since 1900—11 Jimmy Carter (GA-1976, 1980), Ronald Reagan (CA- 1980, 1984), Michael Dukakis (MA-1988), Bill Clinton (AR-1992, 1996), George W. Bush (TX-2000, 2004) OTHER CHARACTERISTICS Most candidates have been Protestant Exceptions (all Dem. & Catholic)—Alfred E. Smith 1928, JFK 1960, RFK 1968, Michael Dukakis (Eastern Orthodox) 1988, John Kerry 2004
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MMost have come from larger states—NY, OH, IL, TX, CA MMost have a pleasant and healthy appearance, appear to be happily married, and have an attractive family AA well-developed speaking ability is a plus FFew female candidates—Geraldine Ferraro 1984 (VP), Hillary Clinton (2008) TTHE END
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