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Voters and Voter Behavior

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Title: Voters and Voter Behavior


1
Chapter 6
  • Voters and Voter Behavior

2
Section 1 The Right to VoteHistory of Voting
Rights
  • Framers left voter qualifications up to the
    states.
  • When the Constitution went into effect, only
    white, male property owners could vote.
  • Today the American electorate is nearly 220
    million people.
  • Electorate potential voting population
  • This is the result of in voting laws due to over
    200 years of often bitter and violent struggle.
  • The history of voting rights in America has had
    two long-term trends
  • Elimination of voting restrictions
  • Power of the states over voting rights has
    shifted to the National government.

3
Extending Suffrage 5 Stages
  • The growth of the American electorate has come in
    5 stages over the last 200 yrs.
  • Early 1800s religious qualifications and
    property ownership disappeared.
  • Post- Civil War race qualifications for
    citizenship were eliminated
  • However, African Americans were pretty much kept
    from voting until the 1960s.
  • 1920s sex qualifications are eliminated by the
    19th amendment
  • 1960s laws preventing African Americans from
    voting in the South were eliminated by the Voting
    Rights Act of 1965.
  • 1970s voting age reduced to 18 by the 26th
    amendment

4
Power to set Voting Qualifications
  • Constitution gives states the power to set voting
    qualifications.
  • There are 4 restrictions on how the states use
    this power
  • No state can deny someone the right to vote on
    the basis of race.
  • No state can deny someone the right to vote on
    the basis of sex.
  • No state can require payment of a tax as a
    condition for voting.
  • No state can deny someone who is at least 18
    years of age the to vote.

5
Section 2Voter Qualifications
  • Every state requires 3 qualifications to vote
  • Citizenship
  • Residence
  • Age
  • The states have some wiggle room with citizenship
    and residence, but not with age.
  • Nothing in the Constitution says that aliens can
    not vote.
  • It is up to the states.
  • At one time, nearly ¼ of the states allowed
    aliens to vote.

6
Voter Qualifications Residency
  • Minnesota and Pennsylvania require that you be a
    citizen for a certain period of time before you
    can vote.
  • Minnesota 3 months
  • Pennsylvania 1 month
  • In order to vote, you have to be a legal resident
    of the state you are voting in.
  • Some states require that you live there for a
    certain length of time before you can be
    considered a legal resident.
  • This was done to prevent voter fraud
  • Allow new residents time to become familiar with
    politics in that state.

7
Voter Qualifications Residency
  • For many years, states imposed a long residency
    requirement.
  • 1 year in the state, 60-90 days in the county,
    and 30 days in a local ward or precinct.
  • Today, most states require a much shorter time.
  • Usually 30 days or so.
  • Any requirement of longer than 30 days was banned
    by Congress in the Voting Rights Act of 1970 and
    the 1972 Supreme Court case of Dunn vs.
    Blumstein.
  • Most states will not allow transients to claim
    residency and vote.
  • Transients people who are only in the state for
    a short time.

8
Voter Qualifications Age
  • The 26th Amendment set the voting age at 18 in
    response to the Vietnam War and the draft.
  • No state can have an age requirement of more than
    18 years old.
  • Before the 26th Amendment the accepted voting age
    was 21.
  • Several states did allow those under 21 to vote
    before the 26th Amendment
  • Georgia (1943)
  • Kentucky (1955)
  • Alaska (1959)
  • Hawaii (1959)

9
Voter Qualifications Age
  • The fight to lower the voting age to 18 started
    during WWII.
  • Even though 18 year olds can vote, only about 38
    of them did in 2004.
  • The highest percentage was 48 in 1972
  • In some states if your birthday is after the
    primary elections, but before the general
    election, then you can vote in the primary.

10
Voter Qualifications Registration
  • 49 out of the 50 states require their citizens to
    register to vote.
  • North Dakota is the only state that doesnt.
  • Registration is a procedure of voter
    identification to prevent voter fraud.
  • It gives election officials a list of potential
    voters.
  • Voter registrations started in the early 1900s
    when there was a lot of voter fraud going on.

11
Voter Qualifications Registration
  • A potential voter must provide
  • Name
  • Age
  • Place of birth
  • Present address
  • Length of residence
  • Political party preference
  • Voters remain registered until they
  • Move
  • Die
  • Are convicted of a serious crime
  • Are placed in a mental institution

12
Voter Qualifications Registration
  • Every 2-4 years, election officials are supposed
    to review the list of names, and remove anyone no
    longer eligible to vote.
  • This does not always happen.
  • Names of dead people are often times still on the
    lists.
  • Some see the registration process as too much of
    a hassle, and hindrance to voting.
  • Many people dont vote because they arent
    registered.

13
Voter Qualifications Registration
  • In 1993, Congress passed the Motor-Voter Law to
    make registration easier.
  • This law allowed voters to register in several
    ways
  • When they renewed their drivers license
  • By mail
  • Made registration materials available at local
    government offices
  • Nearly 8 million people have registered to vote
    as a result of the Motor Voter Law.
  • In most states you must be registered up to 20-30
    days before an election (except Maine and
    Wisconsin).

14
Voter Qualifications Literacy
  • Today, no state has a literacy qualification.
  • Literacy the ability to read or write
  • Literacy requirements have been used to ensure
    voters can make an informed decision
  • They have also been used to prevent certain
    groups of people from voting.
  • Namely African Americans in the South.
  • Also Native Americans and Latinos in the
    Southwest.
  • The test given to whites was easier than the test
    given to minorities.
  • Some whites were actually kept from voting by the
    literacy tests.

15
Voter Qualifications Literacy
  • To fix this unintended problem, many states added
    grandfather clauses.
  • Grandfather Clause any male voter whose father
    voted in an election before 1870 could be allowed
    to vote without taking the literacy test.
  • This pretty much left out African American males.
  • Literacy tests for voting were outlawed by the
    Voting Rights Act of 1970.

16
Voter Qualifications Poll Tax
  • Many states used to require a tax be paid in
    order to vote.
  • This was known as a poll tax.
  • Most all of the Southern states adopted this
    after the Civil War.
  • They did it in an attempt to keep African
    Americans from voting.
  • The 24th Amendment (1964) outlawed the
    requirement of a poll tax in national elections.

17
Section 3Civil Rights
  • The effort to give minority groups the right to
    vote started with the passage of the 15th
    Amendment in 1870.
  • This amendment gave African Americans males the
    right to vote.
  • Congress did not enforce the 15th Amendment
    effectively until the 1960s.
  • For nearly 90 years African Americans were
    prevented from voting by
  • Violence
  • Literacy tests
  • Poll taxes

18
Civil Rights
  • Many Southern governments drew districts in a way
    that divided African Americans, and allowed white
    voters to be the majority.
  • This is a tactic called gerrymandering.
  • Gerrymandering drawing electoral district lines
    in order to limit the voting strength of a
    particular group
  • Democrats in the South refused to allow African
    Americans to be members.
  • This prevented African Americans from
    participating in primary elections.
  • Such primaries became known as white primaries.

19
Civil Rights
  • Both white primaries and gerrymandering were
    outlawed by the Supreme Court.
  • White primaries (Smith v. Allwright, 1944)
  • Gerrymandering (Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 1960)
  • The Supreme Court struck down several practices
    designed to keep African Americans from voting in
    the 1940s and 1950s.
  • The problem was it could only do so if victims
    sued.
  • Many were afraid to sue because whites threatened
    them.
  • Once African American leaders became involved,
    more people came forward.

20
Civil Rights
  • The first Civil Rights law passed to enforce the
    15th Amendment was the Civil Rights Act of 1957.
  • Established the Civil Rights Commission.
  • The commission was to investigate voter
    discrimination and report back to Congress and
    the President.
  • Congress passed another Civil Rights Act in 1960.
  • This ensured that federal voting referees were
    assigned in areas where voter discrimination had
    been found.
  • These referees would help eligible voters get
    registered, and ensure the voting process was
    followed correctly.

21
Civil Rights
  • The Civil Rights Act of 1964 did much more than
    the previous two acts.
  • This outlawed discrimination in employment.
  • Also outlawed the use of any voter qualifications
    for the purpose of discrimination (i.e. literacy
    tests, poll tax)
  • Many efforts by African American leaders to get
    African Americans registered were met by
    violence.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • Dr. Martin Luther King and his supporters marched
    to protest voter discrimination and were attacked
    by local and state police as well as white
    civilians.
  • Two civil rights workers were killed.

22
Civil Rights
  • Many Americans saw this violence on television,
    and called for new, stronger laws to protect
    African American voting rights.
  • In response Congress passes the Voting Rights Act
    of 1965.
  • This applies to elections at all levels (local,
    state, and federal).
  • The law was intended to last only 5 years, but
    has been extended four times (most recently in
    2006).
  • Its provisions will run out in 2031, if it is not
    updated before then.

23
Civil Rights
  • The Voting Rights Act of 1965 also required that
    any changes to voting laws in states with voter
    discrimination had to be approved by the Justice
    Department.
  • This pre-approval for changes to voting laws
    became known as preclearance.
  • Some notable additions to the Voting Rights Act
    of 1965
  • 1975
  • This update outlawed literacy tests permanently.
  • It also included Hispanics, Native Americans, and
    Asians.

24
Section 4Voter Behavior Nonvoters
  • The word idiot comes from a Greek word meaning
    the people of Athens who did not vote.
  • In the 2004 presidential election, nearly 95
    million eligible voters did not vote.
  • This number is even larger for off-year
    congressional elections.
  • Also, the lower a political office is, the less
    likely people are to turn out to vote for it.
  • More people vote in presidential elections than
    elections for Congress.
  • More people vote in state elections than county
    elections.

25
Voter Behavior Nonvoters
  • If presidential and Congressional elections are
    in the same year, more people will vote in for
    Congress.
  • This is true at the state level too

26
Voter Behavior Why People Dont Vote
  • Many nonvoters are cannot-voters
  • Of the 95 million people who didnt vote in 2004,
    nearly 10 million were legal and illegal
    immigrants living in the U.S.
  • 5 to 6 million were either too ill or had
    disabilities that kept them from voting.
  • 2 to 3 million were traveling and couldnt vote.
  • This also include prisoners and patients in
    mental institutions.
  • Many nonvoters dont vote because they feel that
    it has little impact on the person that actually
    wins.

27
Voter Behavior Why People Dont Vote
  • Many nonvoters feel that no matter who wins
    things will continue to go well for them and this
    country.
  • Other nonvoters refuse to vote because they dont
    trust our government or politicians.
  • Most nonvoters have no feeling of political
    efficacy.
  • They dont believe that their vote will truly
    influence or effect what the government does.
  • They feel they have no real say in what goes on.

28
Voter Behavior Why People Dont Vote
  • Other factors effect voter turnout as well
  • Bad weather
  • Long lines at the polls
  • Long ballots
  • News networks projecting winners
  • Despite all these reasons, the biggest cause of
    nonvoting is a simple lack of interest.

29
Voter Behavior Voters vs. Nonvoters
  • Those most likely to vote have certain common
    characteristics
  • High income
  • Education
  • Long time residents of an area
  • Older
  • Strong party identification
  • Those less likely to vote also share common
    characteristics
  • Younger
  • Less educated
  • From rural areas

30
Voter Behavior Voters vs. Nonvoters
  • Those who feel that they can influence our
    government vote despite their age, income, or
    education level.
  • These people have a high sense political
    efficacy.
  • More competition between candidates tends to make
    more people vote despite other factors.

31
Voter Behavior Studying It
  • Most of what we know about voter behavior come
    from 3 sources
  • Election results studying voter returns in
    areas populated by certain groups
  • Survey research polling a scientifically chosen
    sample of the population
  • Political socialization studies studying the
    process of how people get their political
    attitudes and ideas

32
Voter Behavior Factors that Influence Voters
  • Personal Characteristics
  • Age, race, sex, income, religion, etc.
  • Group Affiliations
  • Family, friends, co-workers, party, etc.
  • Psychological Factors
  • Perception of parties, candidates, and issues

33
Voter Behavior Sociological Factors
  • Income/Occupation
  • Voters with higher incomes tend to be Republican
  • Professionals tend to vote Republican
  • Manual workers tend to vote Democratic
  • Education
  • More education more likely to vote Republican

34
Voter Behavior Sociological Factors
  • Gender/Age
  • Women favor Democrats
  • Men favor Republicans
  • Younger voters tend to vote for Democrats
  • Older voters tend to vote for Republicans
  • Religion/Ethnicity
  • Protestant Christians vote Republican
  • Jews and Catholics tend to vote Democratic
  • African Americans tend to vote Democratic

35
Voter Behavior Psychological Factors
  • Party Identification
  • Most significant and lasting predictor of how a
    person will vote.
  • Likely to vote straight-ticket, or vote only
    for candidates from one party.
  • Even though party identification is a big factor,
    its influence is slipping.
  • More voters are voting split-ticket, or voting
    for candidates from different parties.
  • More voters are identifying themselves as
    independents as well.

36
Voter Behavior Psychological Factors
  • Impression of Candidates
  • The way voters view candidates can have a large
    impact on their vote.
  • Voters tend to focus on ca candidates
  • Personality
  • Style
  • Appearance
  • Impression of Issues
  • The more emotionally involved in an issue a voter
    is, the more influence it will have on their
    vote.
  • Also, the way the issues are presented in the
    media can influence voters.
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