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Published byAllen Arnold Modified over 9 years ago
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The Electoral Process
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The Nominating Process Process of candidate selection the naming of those who will seek office function of the political parties limits the choices voters can make in an election
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Types of Nomination Self-announcement oldest form used by George Wallace in 1968 and Ross Perot in 1992 Caucus private group of like minded people who choose their candidate Convention party members meet to select local candidates and select delegates to state convention who select state candidates and delegates to national convention
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Types of Nomination Direct Primary election held within the party to select candidate for general election State governments regulate and conduct primaries Types Closed primary - only declared party members may vote Open primary - any qualified voter may vote Blanket primary - can vote for candidates of either party Runoff primary - held if absolute majority is needed to win Nonpartisan primary- elections in which candidates are not identified by party Presidential primary - voters elect some or all of the delegates to the party’s national convention and/or make their preference of candidate known
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Types of Nomination Petition candidates are nominated by petitions signed by a certain number of qualified voters found most often at local level method by which minor party and independents candidates get on the ballot in the various States.
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Elections Most election law is State law Federal election law Congressional elections election of presidential electors require the use of secret ballots protect the right of all to vote prohibits various corrupt practices and regulates the financing of campaigns for federal offices
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Elections Congress has set date for national elections November of every even- numbered year Tuesday after the first Monday Coattail Effect Precinct voting district State law regulates size Polling Place where voters in precinct actually vote
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Ballots Device by which a voter registers a choice in an election Australian Ballot printed at public expense lists the names of all candidates to all offices given out only at the polls, one to each voter voted in secret Types Office-Group Ballot Party-Column Ballot Sample Ballot Long vs Short
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Ballots Voting Machines Invented by Thomas Edison Used in some form by all States Advantages Do away with the need for manual vote counting reduce the number of persons needed to administer speed up the election process Electronic Vote Counting punch cards or scan sheets Vote-by-Mail pros -increases turnout and reduces costs cons -open to fraud and not very secret
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Money and the Election Process Sources of Campaign Funds Private Givers Small contributors - only about 10% Wealthier givers Candidates themselves Political action committee - special interest groups Temporary organizations - formed for campaigns fund-raising events, telethons, and direct mail campaigns Public Funds from federal and State treasuries
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Regulating Campaign Finance Laws Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA) 1971 FECA Amendments of 1974 FECA Amendments of 1976 Federal Election Commission administers federal campaign finance law six members appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate
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Disclosure Laws no contributions in the name of another person no contributions from foreign sources no cash gifts of more than $100 all ads must carry the name of person groups who paid for it any contribution or loan of $200 or more any expenditure of $200 or more any contribution of $5000 or more must be reported within 48 hrs. any independent group spending more than $250 must file with the FEC labor unions and corporations may not contribute but their PACs can
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PACs Political Action Committee gather contributions from members give contributions to candidates that support policies favorable to the group no PAC may contribute more than $5000 to any one federal candidate independent PACs may spend an unlimited amount
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Limits on Contributions No person can give more than $1000 to a federal candidate in a primary No person can give more than $1000 to a federal candidate in a general election No person can give more than $5000 to a PAC or $20,000 to a national party committee Any one persons contributions are limited to $25,000 in any one year
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Limits on Expenditures Federal law limits campaign spending for those candidates that accept public funds Provided for in the Revenue Act of 1971 Preconvention period - to be eligible must raise $100,000 from individuals in $5000 lots in each of at least 20 States. Each lot built from donations of not more than $250. Convention - if major party asks it receives grant to pay for convention Presidential campaign - subsidy will cover cost of campaign but candidate can spend no more than subsidy and can not accept funds from any other source
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