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Campaigns and Elections Political Competition in Democracy This presentation is the property of Dr. Kevin Parsneau for use by him and his current students.

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Presentation on theme: "Campaigns and Elections Political Competition in Democracy This presentation is the property of Dr. Kevin Parsneau for use by him and his current students."— Presentation transcript:

1 Campaigns and Elections Political Competition in Democracy This presentation is the property of Dr. Kevin Parsneau for use by him and his current students. No other person may use or reprint without his permission.

2 What are the different types of elections in the U.S.? Who runs for offices and who wins? How do voters decide? How do elections fit into the big picture for democracy? How are presidential elections different?

3 Types of Elections General Elections – Presidential – Midterm Primaries and caucuses – Closed – Open

4 Types of Intra-party Elections Caucus Primary Closed caucus or primary Open caucus or primary

5 Who runs for Congress? White Elderly Males Lawyers Less now than in the past

6 Theoretical “Ideal” Campaign Median Voter Theory: (PARAPHRASE) the candidate that endorses policies that appeal to the “median voter” (i.e. the voter that represents the winning vote (50% +1)) will win the election. Thus candidates choose policies designed to win the vote of the “median voter.”

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9 Campaigns Election Strategies – Win Your Primary/ Caucus i.e. appeal to your party in the electorate Secures volunteers and contributions – Win your general election i.e. appeal to moderates pick up undecided, low motivated and low info voters avoid abandoning your partisan supporters

10 The “Shift” After trying to appeal to their party bases of relatively extreme and activist voters, candidates must shift their positions to attract moderate, independent and often less motivated or informed voters.

11 The “Shift” Two Potential Strategies Compromise-“move” to the center by changing your policy positions to centrists positions similar to the “median voter.” Crafted Talk-appear to change your positions by using language designed to sound centrist but that blurs your real positions and plans.

12 Hmmm… To some extent candidates compromise… To some extent candidates engage in “Crafted Talk” Candidates who do it well tend to win Candidates who do not do it lose It is too easy to blame the politicians

13 Campaigns Who wins elections? – Incumbency advantage – Name recognition – Constituency Service and “pork” – “War chests” – Coattails – Final Steps to Winning the Campaign—G.O.T.V.

14 How Do Voters Choose? Party Identification (PID) Party Platform Ideology Image Issues

15 Elections and Responsiveness Prospective voting Retrospective voting Sociotropic voting

16 Unique Aspects of Presidential Elections Presidential Primaries and Caucuses – Go state by state winning delegates to the national conventions National Conventions – Delegates and Superdelegates vote to select the party nominees General Election – Campaigning for the Electoral College

17 Effects of the Electoral College 50 (51 w/ DC) separate elections for electors Have to win states not just votes Not only population centers and big cities Focus on big electoral states Focus on swing states Hard for third parties to compete Faithless electors Can have an “undemocratic” outcome

18 Is what it takes to get elected the same as what it takes to govern? Compromise Principles Rally support for yourself Vilify opponents Effect on turnout and faith in democracy


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