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Elections

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Title: Elections


1
  • Elections

American Government Continuity and Change 9th
Edition OConnor and Sabato
2
Just a review..
3
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

4
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

5
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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8
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

9
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

10
  • Voting What do you think?
  • https//www.youtube.com/watch?vZG_IG-S1bfE

11
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.

12
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

13
Purposes of Elections
  • Electorate
  • Citizens eligible to vote
  • Mandate
  • A command, indicated by an electorates 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

14
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 partys 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.

15
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

16
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

17
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 states voters for
    approval
  • Recall
  • Voters can remove an incumbent from office by
    popular vote
  • Are very rare

18
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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20
Primaries v. Caucuses
  • Primaries
  • Caucuses
  • 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

21
2012 Primary Results
http//www.cnn.com/election/2012/primaries.html
22
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 19th
    century
  • Today the convention is fundamentally different
  • Nominations settled well in advance of the
    convention because of primaries

23
For a review on all things elections.
  • https//www.youtube.com/watch?vWfrXIGclkLA

24
National Convention Schedule
  • Day 1
  • Keynote speaker
  • Day 2
  • Announcement of party platform

25
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

26
2012 National Conventions
  • Democrats
  • Republicans
  • September 3 6, 2012
  • Charlotte, NC
  • http//www.demconvention.com/
  • August 27 30, 2012
  • Tampa, FL
  • www.gopconvention2012.com

27
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

28
The Electoral Collegehttps//www.youtube.com/watc
h?vW9H3gvnN468
  • 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
    (23rd Amendment)

29
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.

30
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

31
The Electoral College in the 19th Century
  • 12th 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

32
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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34
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

35
Congressional Elections
  • When incumbents lose it is generally due to
  • Redistricting
  • Gerrymandering
  • Scandals
  • Presidential Coattails
  • Senators are less likely to be reelected than
    Reps

36
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vYcUDBgYodIE
37
Other district lines
  • http//www.cobbk12.org/centraloffice/planning/2013
    -14AttendanceZones_High.pdf
  • Our district
  • https//www.govtrack.us/congress/members/GA/6

38
Midterm Congressional Elections
  • Election takes place in the middle of a
    presidential term
  • Presidents party usually loses seats in midterms
  • Tendency for voters to punish the presidents
    party more severely in the sixth year of an eight
    year presidency - 6th year itch
  • Retrospective voting
  • Senate elections less inclined to the 6th year
    itch

39
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

40
Electoral College 2008
Obama 69,456,897 365 McCain 59,534,814
173
41
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

42
Electoral Projections 2012 http//www.washingtonpo
st.com/wp-srv/special/politics/election-map-2012/p
resident/
43
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