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POLITICAL BEHAVIOR NEED TO KNOW: Unit 2
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US POLITICAL CULTURE Chapter 4
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Political Culture American Political Culture Liberty, Equality, Democracy, Civic Duty, Individual Responsibility ADVERSARIAL US vs. Other Nations Stronger sense of Civic Duty and Civic Competence Less voting, but MORE participation The Culture War – Orthodox vs. Progressive Political Efficacy Internal vs. External Political Tolerance?
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PUBLIC OPINION Chapter 7
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Polling Polls can MEASURE or SHAPE political opinions 5 steps of process Universe, Sample, Valid Questions, Interview, Analyze Data Flaws or errors can invalidate poll data Random Sampling is most accurate
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Political Socialization Sources of Socialization Family #1 Work, school, friends, church, groups, etc Trends Gender Gap: Women more liberal Race: white more conservative, most minorities liberal (not most Asians or Cubans) Social Class: Poor more liberal Religion: Protestant Conservative, Catholic & Jew Liberal Region: South & Midwest Conservative, West & NE Liberal
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Political Ideology Political Spectrum Left-Wing: Liberal Right-Wing: Conservative Center: Moderate Personal FreedomState ControlPersonal Property Community Property Personal RightsPublic GoodMulticulturalismNationalismBig GovernmentSmall Government
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POLITICAL PARTICIPATION Chapter 8
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Voting VAP (Voting Age Population) vs. VEP (Voting Eligible Population) vs. Registered Voters Extending Suffrage in US Stage 1: No Property Requirements Stage 2: 15 th Amendment (African-Americans) Stage 3: 19 th Amendment (Women) Stage 4: Voting Rights Act of 1965 (No Literacy Tests) & 24 th Amendment (No Poll Taxes) Stage 5: 26 th Amendment (18 year olds)
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Voter Turnout US v. World: Very low compared to other nations Causes of the Problem? Low Political Efficacy, Apathy, difficult registration process Registration Motor Voter Law (effects have not been great) PARTICIPATION Voting not only way to participate US low in Voter turnout but HIGH in other participation (campaigning, petitions, contacting govt officials, etc)
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ELECTIONS AND CAMPAIGNS Chapter 10
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Campaigns Issues Position vs. Valence Retrospective vs. Prospective Voting Coalition-Building Combining different groups to support a candidate Base v. Swing Voters Base: Traditional supporters of Party (More Extreme Right or Left) Swing: Undecided (More Moderate)
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Campaign Finance Going up each election Sources of Funds Individual Contributions, PAC money, Fed Govt Independent Expenditures & SuperPACs Reforms Federal Campaign Act of 1974 – Created FEC McCain-Feingold Act (BCRA) – Limits on Contributions Buckley v. Valeo & Citizens United v. FEC undermine laws
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Elections Presidential vs. Congressional More people vote in Prez elections Prez elections more competitive Incumbency Advantage & Sophomore Surge Much greater in HoR Why? Pork-Barrel Legislation Franking Privilege Name-Recognition PAC Money Gerrymandering Gerrymandering Drawing district lines for political advantage Baker v. Carr, Wesberry v. Sanders, Reynolds v. Sims
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Presidential Elections Primary: Intra-Party Election to get nomination Open, Closed, Blanket Delegates selected in Primaries, Nomination officially given at Convention Election Day 1 st Tuesday after 1 st Monday in November Electoral College # of electors = # of HoR + # of SEN 270 (majority) to win Election is by state (winner take all) 4 times, winner of popular vote doesn’t become Prez If no majority, HoR picks Prez
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Court Cases to Know Baker v. Carr Wesberry v. Sanders Reynolds v. Sims Buckley v. Valeo McConnell v. FEC Citizens United v. FEC
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