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Published byKevin Patrick Modified over 9 years ago
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States control election procedures (reserved power) Help America Vote Act (2002): requires states to update the election process
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Tuesday after the 1 st Monday in November during even # years. Midterm elections occur during years when the president isn’t elected ◦ Governors, House, Senate ◦ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFqln0eyyHM
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House – 2 year terms Senate – 6 year terms continuous body, which means 1/3 up for election every 2 years
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Primaries: contest between candidates within a party
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Closed – only those registered with the party can vote Open – anyone can vote for either party, no affiliation necessary; must choose which party ballot at the poll Blanket – choose candidates from any party, don’t have to choose one party (Alaska and Washington only)
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If no candidate gets majority in the primary, then the top 2 face off in another primary. ◦ Example: 2014 GA Senatorial Race; David Perdue and Jack Kingston were top 2 Republican candidates from primary Perdue won runoff election, so he went up against Michelle Nunn in general election)
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Georgia has open primaries, but you can only vote in a runoff for the party you originally voted for.
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Contests between candidates of opposing parties Once a party chooses the candidate in a primary, each state holds a general election
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ONLY AT STATE/LOCAL LEVEL: ◦ Recall – citizens can remove a corrupt official ◦ Referendum – people vote on a measure passed by legislature ◦ Initiative – people can get proposed legislation directly on the ballot
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