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Elections American Government: Continuity and Change 9th Edition O’Connor and Sabato
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Just a review…..
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Patterns in Voter Turnout Turnout: the proportion of the voting-age public that votes ◦ 40% of the eligible adult population votes ◦ 25% are occasional voters ◦ 35% rarely vote
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Patterns in Voter Turnout Education: Voters tend to be more educated Income: Consistent voters have higher incomes Age: Younger people vote less Gender: Women vote at the same rate or slightly higher rate than men Race and Ethnicity: ◦ Whites vote more regularly than African Americans – related to income and educational differences in the two groups ◦ Hispanics vote less than African Americans ◦ Have potential to wield much influence given their increasing size Interest in politics: Those interested in politics vote more
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Why Is Voter Turnout So Low? Too Busy Difficulty of Registration Difficulty of Absentee Voting Number of Elections Voter Attitudes Weakened Influence of Political Parties
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Efforts to Improve Voter Turnout Easier Registration and Absentee Voting Make Election Day a Holiday Strengthen Parties Other suggestions ◦ Holding fewer elections ◦ Proportional representation system for congressional elections ◦ Saturday or Sunday election day ◦ Making voting mandatory ◦ Tax credits for voting ◦ Election weeks rather than election days ◦ Internet voting – FRAUD CONCERNS
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Patterns in Vote Choice Party Identification ◦ Most powerful predictor voter behavior ◦ Ticket-splitting: voting for candidates of different parties for various offices in the same election Race and Ethnicity ◦ Whites increased tendency to vote Republican ◦ African Americans vote overwhelmingly for Democrats ◦ Hispanics also tend to identify with and vote for Democrats Women today more likely to support Democratic candidates ◦ Gender gap varies by election Poor vote more often for Democrats; wealthier for Republicans Ideology related closely to vote choice Conservatives for Republicans Liberals for Democrats
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Voting: What do you think? https://www.youtube.com/watc h?v=ZG_IG-S1bfE
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Assignment I want you to write 4 reflections of at least 5 sentences. You'll be sharing these tomorrow with a small group: 1. Watch this clip (and maybe the next one) and write whether or not you agree with John Stossel. 2. Argue both sides for literacy tests being a requirement for voting - for and against. 3. Argue that the voting age should stay 18 and then argue that it should be raised to 21. 4. Ask a person to share their voting experience (or feelings about voting) with you and summarize it. 5. Come up with three suggestions to improve voter turnout.
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Purposes of Elections Regular free elections ◦ guarantee mass political action ◦ enable citizens to influence the actions of their government Popular election confers legitimacy on a government that can be achieved no other way Regular elections also ensure that government is accountable to the people it serves
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Purposes of Elections Electorate ◦ Citizens eligible to vote Mandate: ◦ A command, indicated by an electorate’s voters, for the elected officials to carry out their platforms ◦ Sometimes the claim of a mandate is suspect because voters are not so much endorsing one candidate as rejecting the other
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Primary Elections Election in which voters decide which of the candidates within a party will represent the party in the general election. Closed primary: a primary election in which only a party’s registered voters are eligible to vote Open primary: a primary in which party members, independents, and sometimes members of the other party are allowed to vote Blanket primary: a primary in which voters can cast votes back and forth between candidates from any party.
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Primary voting can bring: Crossover voting: participation in the primary of a party with which the voter is not affiliated Raiding: An organized attempt by voters of one party to influence the primary results of the other party Runoff primary: a second primary election between the two candidates receiving the greatest number of votes in the first primary
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General Elections General elections are those in which voters decide which candidates will actually fill elective public offices Held at many levels Contests between the candidates of opposing parties
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Initiative, Referendum, and Recall Initiative ◦ An election that allows citizens to propose legislation and submit it to the state electorate for popular vote Referendum ◦ An election whereby the state legislature submits proposed legislation to the state’s voters for approval Recall ◦ Voters can remove an incumbent from office by popular vote ◦ Are very rare
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Presidential Elections Primary elections or caucuses are used to elect national convention delegates which choose the nominee ◦ Winner-take-all primary ◦ Proportional representation primary ◦ Caucus
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Primaries v. Caucuses PrimariesCaucuses ◦ More democratic ◦ More representative ◦ A rigorous test for the candidate ◦ Caucus participants more informed; more interactive and informative ◦ Unfair scheduling affects outcomes ◦ Frontloading (being first in the primary calendar) gives some primary states an advantage Frontloading is the tendency to choose an early date on the primary schedule
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2012 Primary Results http://www.cnn.com/election/2012/primaries.html
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The Party Conventions Out-of-power party holds its convention first, usually in late July/August, followed in August/Sept by party holding the presidency Conventions were decision-making body in the 19 th century Today the convention is fundamentally different ◦ Nominations settled well in advance of the convention because of primaries
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For a review on all things elections…. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfrXIGclkLA
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National Convention Schedule Day 1 ◦ Keynote speaker Day 2 ◦ Announcement of party platform
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National Convention Schedule Day 3 ◦ Candidate nomination & speeches ◦ Balloting from the states (majority rule) ◦ Winner (party nominee) names a VP running mate Day 4 ◦ Confirm party nomination ◦ Nominee Acceptance speech ◦ Campaign Kickoff
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2012 National Conventions DemocratsRepublicans September 3 – 6, 2012 Charlotte, NC http://www.demconvention.com/ August 27 – 30, 2012 Tampa, FL www.gopconvention2012.com www.gopconvention2012.com
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National Conventions: The News Media Changing nature of coverage ◦ No prime time coverage on some days ◦ Extending coverage on the final day of each convention ◦ Reflects change in political culture More interest in the candidates themselves ◦ Convention still generates much coverage for the party
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The Electoral College https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W9H3gvnN468 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W9H3gvnN468 Representatives of each state who cast the final ballots that actually elect a president Total number of electors for each state equal to the number of senators and representatives that a state has in the U.S. Congress District of Columbia is given 3 electoral votes (23 rd Amendment)
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The Electoral College States are “winner takes all” ◦ Emphasis is placed on heavily populated states ◦ Maine and Nebraska are the exceptions and use proportional voting Vote of Electors ◦ First Monday after first Wednesday in December ◦ Counted before joint session of Congress in January by the Vice President.
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The Electoral College Result of compromise between: ◦ Selection by Congress versus direct popular election Three essentials to understanding the design of the Electoral College: ◦ Constructed to work without political parties ◦ Constructed to cover both the nominating and electing phases of presidential selection ◦ Constructed to produce a nonpartisan president
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The Electoral College in the 19 th Century 12 th Amendment (1804) ◦ Attempt to remedy the confusion between the selection of vice presidents and presidents that emerged in the election of 1800 ◦ Provided for separate elections for each office, with each elector having only one vote to cast for each ◦ In event of a tie, the election still went to the House Top three candidates go to House Each state House delegation casts one vote
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The Electoral College in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries Electoral college crises ◦ At times a candidate can win the Electoral College vote without having won the popular vote Reapportionment matters ◦ Representation of states in the Electoral College is altered every ten years to reflect population shifts ◦ Party in power can work to earn more districts as new lines are drawn.
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Congressional Elections Very different from presidential elections ◦ Lesser known candidates, more difficulty getting media attention Incumbency Advantage ◦ Better known ◦ Fundraising is easier ◦ Can use office resources (franking privilege, staff, travel, etc) ◦ Can cite work already done in Washington
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Congressional Elections When incumbents lose it is generally due to: ◦ Redistricting Gerrymandering ◦ Scandals ◦ Presidential Coattails
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Midterm Congressional Elections Election takes place in the middle of a presidential term ◦ President’s party usually loses seats in midterms ◦ Tendency for voters to punish the president’s party more severely in the sixth year of an eight year presidency - 6th year itch Retrospective voting Senate elections less inclined to the 6 th year itch
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Reforming the Electoral Process Focus on the Electoral College Other areas ◦ Nomination Regional primaries ◦ Campaign Finance Reform ◦ Online Voting ◦ Voting by Mail ◦ Modernizing the Ballot
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Electoral College 2008 Obama 69,456,897 365 McCain 59,534,814 173
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2008 Presidential Election Voting Age Population: 231,229,580 Turnout: 132,618,580 %: 56.8% Obama raised $532,946,511 and spent $513,557,218 McCain raised $379,006,485 and spent $346,666,422
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Electoral Projections 2012
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