Title: Elections and Campaigns
1Elections and Campaigns
2Presidential Versus Congressional Campaigns
- Presidential and congressional races differ in
four important ways. - The First, Presidential races are more
competitive than those for the house of
representatives. In the thirty five elections
form 1932 to 2000 the republicans won control of
the house only six times. In the eighteen
presidential elections during the same period the
republicans won the white house on eight
occasions - Second, a much smaller proportion of people vote
in congressional races during off years ( that is
, when there is no presidential contest) than
vote for president.
3Cont
- Third, members of congress can do things
- for their constituents that a president
cannot. They take credit-sometimes deserved.
Sometimes not-for every grant, - contract, bridge, canal, and highway. The
- federal government provides the district or
- the state.
- Fourth, a candidates for congress can deny that
he or she is responsible for the mess in
Washington even when the candidate is an
incumbent. Incumbents tend to run as individual,
even to the point of denouncing the very congress
of witch they are a part.
4Cont
- Fourth, a candidates for congress can deny that
he or she is responsible for the mess in
Washington even when the candidate is an
incumbent. Incumbents tend to run as individual,
even to the point of denouncing the very congress
of witch they are a part.
5Running for president
- The task facing anyone who wishes to be president
is to get mentioned as some one who is of
presidential caliber no one is quite sure why
some people are mentioned and others are not. - Money one reason why running takes so much time
is that it takes so long to rise the necessary
money and build up an organization of personal
followers. - Organization raising and accounting for this
money requires a staff of fund-raisers, lawyers,
and accountants. - Strategy and themes every candidates picks a
strategy for the campaign. In choosing one, much
depends on whether you are the incumbents
6Getting Elected to Congress
- A president cannot serve more than two terms so
at least once every eight years you have a chance
of running against a no incumbent members of
co0ngress can serve for an unlimited number of
terms and so chances are you will run against an
incumbent. - Winning the primary however the district lines
are drawn, getting elected to congress first
requires getting ones name on the ballot. - Staying in office have 2 ways first, produce
legislator who are closely tied to local
concerns. Second, ensures that party leaders will
have influence over them
7Television, Debates, and Direct Mail
- Main way of campaigning is broadcasting
- -Spots
- -Visuals
- Television effect on voting very small to non
Exiting - -Voters have other resources
-
- Visual v. spots
- -Spots are more affective
- -Spots have more information leave on impression
on viewers - -Visual are harder to make effective
- Televised campaign debates
- -No data on how they may affect an election
- -Can give rise to unknown candidates
- Interest
- -Lists
- -Target certain groups of people
- -Less chance of offending some one
- Running a campaigns has become has separated from
governing
8Money
- Money is the mothers milk of politics
- Candidates with most money dont always win
- House senate spend over half a billion dollars
in 2002 on adds
9The Sources of Campaign Money
- Presidential candidate
- -Private donors
- -Federal government
- Congressional candidates get their money from
private sources - -govt also gives parties up to 74.4 million
dollars - -most money comes from small donations
10Campaign Finance Rules
- Individuals cant contribute more than 1,000
- Political Action Committee (PAC) at least 50
members, no more than 5,000 to least 5
candidates - Independent expenditures spending by an
organization (PAC, Union, etc.) that is done to
help a party or candidate but is done
independently of them - Soft money funds obtained by parties that are
spent on party activities, such as get out and
vote drives, but not for a specific candidate.
11Finding A Winning Coalition
- There are to ways to find out the nature of
partys voting coalition - 1 to ask what of groups in the population
support the Democratic party or Republican
candidate for president - - This answers how loyal the groups (unions,
farmers, etc) are - 2 to ask what proportion of a the partys total
vote came form each group (African Americans,
Asians, Hispanics, etc) - -this informs us how important each group is to
a candidate or party
12Cont
- DemocraticAfricans are the most loyal voters
except in - -1952 2/3 voted Democratically
- -1964 4/5 voted Democratically
- Hispanic turn out low, most not citizens so
political power is not equivalent to their s - Republicans often describe as a party of business
professional people, loyally is strong except
in 1964 to support Lyndon Johnson - Farmers are sensitive to farm prices thus quick
to change parties - Every year a winning coalition must be made to
win votes
13The Effects of Elections on Poling
- The election of 1964 democrats such a large
majority in congress presidency brought forth
new policies - -Medicare Medicaid
- -Federal aid to education local enforcement
- -Two dozen environmental consumer protection
laws - -Voting Rights Act of 1965
- -revision of immigration laws
- -A new cabinet-level Dept of Housing Urban
Development
14A Second Campaign Finance Law
- The campaign finance reforms of 1970 made it
harder for new candidates to raise money (
especially for those who are not wealthy - Eg.- -individual contributions 250 or less
- -Interest groups and corporations
5,000 or less - -Self contributions unlimited
- A congressional movement to reform the 1970's
created the Biparistian finance reform act of
2002. This act - -banned sort money ( from corporations and
unions) - -the amount of individual contributions was
raised from 1,000 to2,000 - -imposed sharp restrictions on independent
expenditures by corporations, labor unions, - etc..
15New sources of money
- Programs such as Media Fund and American Voters
are generated by those who can no longer
contribute with soft money and still want to
support a candidate - Eg.- a wealthy man donated 23 million to an
organization who wanted to defeat George - Bush
16Money and Winning
- In presidential campaigns, money does not matter
as much because candidates receive the same
amount of money from the federal government - 3 significant aspects that affect presidential
candidates on the election outcomes - -Political affiliation,
- 80 of presidential votes go to candidates from
eighter of the 2 main parties - (Democrats or Republicans)
- -the state of the economy
- In good economic times party holding the White
House does well, and in bad, it - it does badly
- -the character of the candidate
- Does the candidate think as the voters think
about social issues ( abortion, gun - control, etc.?)
17What decides the election
- Voters tend to vote their party identification ,
even if they dont know the candidates position
on a certain issue.
18Primary Versus General Campaigns
- Primary elections- designed to choose each
partys nominee. - General elections- picks the winner who would
hold office. - Some states like Iowa hold caucuses instead of
primary elections. - What may help you win a primary election or a
caucus can be different from what will help you
win a general election. - Democrats who participate in the Iowa caucus tend
to be more liberal than Democrats generally.
19Two Kinds of Campaign Issues
- Position issues- an issue about which the public
is divided and rival candidates or political
parties adopt different policy positions. - Valence issue- an issue about which the public is
united and rival candidates or political parties
adopt similar positions in hopes that each will
be thought to best represent those widely shared
beliefs.
20Issues, Especially the Economy
- Even though voters may not know a lot about the
issues, it doesnt necessarily mean that issues
play no role in elections or that voters respond
irrationally to them. - Voters are more informed about issues that really
matter to them, issues like whether unemployment
is up or down, prices at the supermarket are
stable or rising, or crime is a problem in their
neighborhoods. In contrary to issues such as
monetary policy, business regulation, and the
trade deficit. - On certain issues like abortion, school prayer,
and race relations they are likely to have some
strong principles that they want to see
politicians obey. - Politics can function without well informed
citizens - Two ways in which issues can affect elections
21Two ways in which issues can affect elections
- Prospective voting - voting for a candidate
because you favor his or her ideas for handling
issues. - It requires a lot of information about issues and
candidates. - They are a minority of all voters.
- Retrospective voting Voting for a candidate
because you like his or her past actions in
office. - Does not require you to have a lot of
information, the only thing that should be clear
is whether things have, in your view, gotten
better or worse. - Elections are decided by retrospective voters.
- An example of retrospective voting was in the
elections of 1980 in which voters decided to vote
against jimmy carter because in their view things
had gotten worse under his command. People then
decided to vote for the other candidate the
alternative candidate, Ronald Reagan. In simple
terms people werent necessarily voting for
Reagan they were just NOT voting for Carterdoes
that make sense
22The Campaign
- Campaigns can make a difference in 3 ways
- They reawaken the partisan loyalties of voters.
- Campaigns give voters a chance to watch how the
candidates handle pressure, and they give
candidates a chance to apply that pressure. - Campaigns allow voters an opportunity to judge
the character and core values of the candidates. - Once the campaign has begun both candidates
immediately start searching each others personal
history, records and statements in order to
portray the worst possible image in newspaper or
TV ads. - Many voters dont like these negative ads but
they work by stimulating voter turnout. - Voters receive guidance as to how a candidate
will behave once elected by listening to the
themes and tone of his statements in contrast to
the details of what he actually says. - Today activists and single-issue groups influence
the selection of candidates, sometimes out of a
belief that it is better to loose with the right
candidate than to win with the wrong one.