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American Government and Politics Today

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Title: American Government and Politics Today


1
American Government and Politics Today
  • Chapter 1
  • The Democratic Republic

2
Politics and Government
  • Key terms
  • Politics who gets what when and how
  • Institution an ongoing organization that
    performs certain functions for society
  • Government institution in which decisions are
    made that resolve conflicts or allocate benefits
    and privileges

3
Why Is Government Necessary?
  • Order
  • Maintaining peace and security by protecting
    members of society from violence and criminal
    activity is the oldest purpose of government.

4
Why is Government Necessary?
  • Liberty
  • The greatest freedom of individuals that is
    consistent with the freedom of other individuals
    in the society can be promoted by or invoked
    against government.

5
Why is Government Necessary?
  • Authority and Legitimacy
  • authority the right and power of a government
    or other entity to enforce its decisions and
    compel obedience.
  • legitimacy is popular acceptance of the right
    and power of a government or other entity to
    exercise authority.

6
Forms of Government
  • Totalitarian Regimegovernment controls all
    aspects of the political and social life of a
    nation.
  • AuthoritarianismA type of regime in which only
    the government itself is fully controlled by the
    ruler. Social and economic institutions exist
    that are not under the governments control.
  • AristocracyRule by the best in reality, rule
    by an upper class.
  • DemocracyA system of government in which
    political authority is vested in the people.
    Derived from the Greek words demos (the people)
    and kratos (authority).

7
Direct Democracy
  • Political decisions are made by the people
    directly, rather than by their elected
    representatives
  • Attained most easily in small political
    communities.

8
Direct Democracy Today
  • Initiativea procedure by which voters can
    propose a law or a constitutional amendment
  • Referenduman electoral device whereby
    legislative or constitutional measures are
    referred by the legislature to the voters for
    approval or disapproval
  • Recalla procedure allowing the people to vote to
    dismiss an elected official from state office
    before his or her term has expired

9
2006 Election
  • A total of 204 ballot propositions went before
    the voters in 37 states on November 7, up from
    162 propositions in November 2004. Voters
    approved 137 measures, rejected 65, and 2 remain
    to be decided. The approval rate of 68 is
    slightly higher than the 67 approval rate in
    November 2004.
  • 75 were initiatives (new laws qualified by
    petition),
  • 4 were referendums (proposals to repeal existing
    laws),
  • one was placed on the ballot by a commission, and
    the rest were legislative measures.
  • The 78 initiatives for the year (including the
    three that were voted on in the summer) is the
    third largest total since the initiative process
    was first used in 1902,.
  • For the year, voters approved 32 of 78
    initiatives. The 41 approval rate is equal to
    the historical average.
  • http//www.iandrinstitute.org/ballotwatch.htm

10
Gay Marriage
  • Seven states approved constitutional amendments
    that restrict marriage to a man and a woman
    (Colorado, Idaho, South Carolina, South Dakota,
    Tennessee, Virginia, and Wisconsin), bringing the
    total number of states that have approved such an
    amendment to 23.

11
Abortion
  • Referred Law 6 in South Dakota.
  • In an effort to create a test case for the U. S.
    Supreme Court to reverse Roe v. Wade, the South
    Dakota legislature passed a law banning abortion
    in early 2006. Voters rejected Referred Law 6, in
    effect repealing the law banning abortion. One
    reason the law was repealed in traditionally
    pro-life South Dakota was the concern that it was
    too severe, lacking adequate exceptions for the
    health of the mother. Abortion rights activists
    were also able to defeat laws in California and
    Oregon that would have required notification of
    parents before a minor received an abortion. 

12
Tobacco
  • Health organizations qualified Initiatives in
    several states to increase taxes on tobacco
    products and ban smoking in public places.
  • Tobacco companies dedicated a reported 100
    million to fight these measures, and were
    successful in defeating tobacco tax increases in
    California and Missouri.
  • Tobacco tax increases in Arizona and South Dakota
    that were not heavily contested were approved.
  • Smoking bans were approved in all three states
    where they were on the ballot, Arizona, Nevada,
    and Ohio. Less restrictive smoking bans placed on
    the ballot by pro-tobacco groups failed in each
    of these states.

13
Is Direct Democracy Dangerous?
  • While the founders believed in government based
    on the consent of the people, they were highly
    distrustful of anything that might look like mob
    rule. Therefore, they devised institutions to
    filter the popular will through elected elites.

14
A Democratic Republic
  • Democratic republic and representative democracy
    really mean the same thinggovernment based on
    elected representativesexcept for the historical
    quirk that a republic cannot have a vestigial
    king.

15
A Democratic Republic (cont)
  • Principles of Democratic Government
  • universal suffrage, or the right of all adults to
    vote for their representatives
  • majority rule, the greatest number of citizens in
    any political unit should select the officials
    and determine policies.
  • Constitutional Democracy.
  • limited government, states the powers of
    government should be limited, usually by
    institutional checks. Without such limits,
    democracy could destroy itself.

16
IdeologiesLiberalism vs. Conservatism
  • Conservatives tend to favor limited governmental
    involvement in the economic sector. Economic
    freedom is seen as a necessity for the good of
    the society. On social issues, conservatives
    advocate governmental involvement to preserve
    traditional values and lifestyles.
  • Liberals tend to favor governmental regulation of
    the economy to benefit individuals within the
    society. On social issues, liberals advocate a
    limited governmental role. Social freedom is
    seen as a necessity for the good of the society.

17
IdeologiesThe Traditional Political Spectrum
  • socialism, a political ideology based on strong
    support for economic and social equality.
    Socialists traditionally envisioned a society in
    which major businesses were taken over by the
    government or by employee cooperatives.
  • libertarianism, a political ideology based on
    skepticism or opposition toward almost all
    government activities.

18
Classical Liberalism
  • Liberal once meant limited government and no
    religion in politics. The term evolved into its
    modern American meaning along with the political
    evolution of the Democratic Party, which was once
    the party of limited government but has become
    the party of (relative) economic equality.

19
Table 1.1 The Traditional Political Spectrum
A "hard-core conservative" would answer personal
questions to include government intervention, but
would answer economic questions to minimize
government involvement. A "hard-core populist/
socialist" would answer both personal and
economic questions with proposals that include
government intervention.
  • A "hard-core liberal" would answer personal
    questions to minimize government involvement, but
    would answer economic questions to include
    government intervention.
  • A "hard-core libertarian" would answer both
    personal and economic questions to minimize
    government involvement

20
Figure 1-1 A Four-Cornered Ideological Grid
21
The Ideological Grid
  • We can break down the electorate into cultural
    and economic liberals, cultural and economic
    conservatives, cultural liberals/economic
    conservatives (libertarians), and cultural
    conservatives/economic liberals.
  • Classifying the Voters. All four viewpoints have
    substantial support based on polling data.
  • Conservative Popularity. However, the term
    conservative, as a self-applied label, is more
    popular than any other label except moderate.

22
Totalitarian Ideologies
  • The ideologies of our enemies, that is, our
    opponents in 20th and 21st century wars, cold or
    hot.
  • Communism, revolutionary variant of socialism
    that favors a partisan (and often totalitarian)
    dictatorship, government control of all
    enterprises, and the replacement of free markets
    by central planning and
  • Fascism, a twentieth-century ideologyoften
    totalitarianthat exalts the national collective
    united behind an absolute ruler, and rejects
    liberal individualism, values action over
    rational deliberation, and glorifies war.

23
Totalitarianism in the Islamic World
  • While communism and fascism are the historical
    ideologies that totalitarianism was coined to
    describe, our current international problem is
    with radical Islamism as exemplified by Al Qaeda.

24
The Changing Face of America
  • Aging
  • Population Growth
  • Ethnic Change
  • Changes in Hispanic Community
  • Women in the Workforce

25
Figure 1.2 The Aging of America
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