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Voter Turnout

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... of U.S. citizens voted in the 2004 presidential election (up from 60% in 2000) ... declining voter turnout 'the longest sustained downturn in American history. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Voter Turnout


1
Voter Turnout
  • POLS 125 Political Parties Elections

A citizen of America will cross the ocean to
fight for democracy, but won't cross the street
to vote in a national election. Bill Vaughan
2
The Vanishing Voter
Patterson calls declining voter turnout the
longest sustained downturn in American history.
What factors have caused it?
  • Generational replacement
  • Lack of competitive elections
  • Weakening party loyalty
  • Unsavory campaigns
  • Negative news

3
This is all the more disturbing because turnout
should have increased
  • Increasing educational attainment
  • Removal of poll taxes and literacy tests
  • Simplified registration procedures

4
Voter Turnout in 2008
In November 2008, 131 million votes were cast for
president.
Is that number high or low?
It depends on how turnout is measured
5
How Should We Measure Turnout?
Turnout statistics can use any of three
denominators
  • The voting-age population (VAP) includes
    non-citizens and felons who are ineligible to
    vote, and excludes expatriate citizens who could
    legally vote overseas. VAP estimates provide the
    lowest turnout levels because they underestimate
    actual turnout.
  • The voting-eligible population (VEP) starts with
    the voting-age population, then subtracts
    disenfranchised felons and non-citizens, and adds
    citizens from overseas. VEP estimates of voting
    turnout are higher than VAP estimates.
  • The number of registered voters includes only
    those legally registered to vote. This provides
    the highest rate of voter turnout.

6
How Should We Measure Turnout?
131 million votes cast
VAP

57 voter turnout
231 million voting age citizens
131 million votes cast
VEP

62 voter turnout
213 million voting eligible citizens
131 million votes cast
REG

76 voter turnout
172 million registered voters
Fraud?
7
Turnout and the Census Bureau
The U.S. Census Bureau reports that 64 of U.S.
citizens voted in the 2004 presidential election
(up from 60 in 2000). Also according to the
Census Bureau, among those registered to vote,
89 (126 million) said they did.
Both figures come from the Current Population
Survey (CPS), and are therefore subject to both
sampling and non-sampling error. For instance,
the CPS estimate of overall turnout (125.7
million) differs from the official turnout, as
reported by the Clerk of the House (122.3
million). Why? Because people lie and
exaggerate in surveys, especially on something as
socially desirable as voting behavior
8
If voter turnout is low, compared to what?
  • Compared to other countries
  • Compared to historic rates of voter turnout in
    the United States

9
Voter Turnout in the United States Compared to
Other Countries
Source International IDEA, http//www.idea.int/vt
/survey/
10
Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, 1828-2008
11
Why Americans Dont Vote
Legal barriers to voting
  • Changing definitions of the eligible electorate
  • Registration requirements
  • Poll taxes
  • Literacy tests

Psychological barriers to voting
  • Rational abstention
  • Political efficacy and civic duty

Political influences on turnout
12
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13
Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, 1828-2008
The 26th Amendment grants 18-20 year olds the
right to vote
The 19th Amendment grants women the right to vote
14
Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, 1828-2008
15
How Should We Measure Turnout?
16
Increasing Voter Turnout
  • OPTION 1 Do nothing. Once we use the
    appropriate measure (e.g., VEP), there is no
    problem.
  • OPTION 2 Do nothing. Turnout may be low, but
    we dont want uneducated, uninformed people
    voting anyway.
  • OPTION 3 Do nothing. Voter and non-voters have
    similar policy preferences, so it makes little
    difference
  • OPTION 4 Do something!
  • Voting by mail
  • Voting early
  • Internet voting
  • Election day registration

17
Does Low Voter Turnout Matter?
Should we prefer a
  • Smaller, more highly educated, less
    representative electorate?
  • Larger, less well educated, more representative
    electorate?

18
Making It Too Easy to Vote?
Jeff Jacoby, a staff writer for the Boston Globe,
wrote the following essay in July,
1996 Universal suffrage? Im for that. Voting
is right, not a privilege? Absolutely. No
unreasonable barriers to voter registration? I
agree. Government workers should go out of their
way to sign up welfare recipients to vote? Hold
it. Welfare recipients are people who dont
work, dont pay taxes and dont support
themselves. Of course there are exceptions, but
as a grouplets face itthey are among the least
educated, least productive, least responsible
adults in America. Theyre also among the least
likely to be interested in elections or to follow
public debates. If in addition they dont bother
to vote, we ought to be grateful. Why would
anyone want to coax them into registering? No
one is disenfranchised in this country. Unlike
the days of old, there are no poll taxes,
literacy tests, gender barriers or property
requirements to come between any citizen and the
voting booth. If U.S. elections are marked by
chronically low turnout, it is not because voters
are kept away. They stay away. Some are
apathetic, some are ignorant, some are simply
self-centered. Why badger people to register?
What would they bring to an election? No welfare
caseworkerno state employee, periodshould have
to spoonfeed voting rights to anyone, least of
all people on the dole. If they can figure out
how to get food stamps, they can figure out how
to get registered. They choose not to? So be
it. American democracy wont suffer.
19
Increasing Voter Turnout
  • OPTION 1 Do nothing. Once we use the
    appropriate measure (e.g., VEP), there is no
    problem.
  • OPTION 2 Do nothing. Turnout may be low, but
    we dont want uneducated, uninformed people
    voting anyway.
  • OPTION 3 Do nothing. Voter and non-voters have
    similar policy preferences, so it makes little
    difference
  • OPTION 4 Do something!
  • Voting by mail
  • Voting early
  • Internet voting
  • Election day registration

20
Why Dont People Vote?
  • Institutional context
  • Motor-Voter
  • Compulsory voting
  • Election Day registration
  • Voting by mail
  • Internet voting
  • Motivational strategies
  • Personal canvassing
  • Social pressure
  • Enduring personal traits and
    psychological orientations
  • Socialization through programs such as Kids
    Voting USA

21
How Does Motor-Voter Work?
Widely known as Motor-Voter, the National Voter
Registration Act of 1993 is designed to encourage
voter registration and to remove discriminatory
and unfair obstacles to voter registration. As
of January 1, 1995, the law requires states to
register voters for federal elections in three
specific ways, in addition to any other
procedures they use currently for registering
voters
  • Simultaneous application for drivers license and
    voter registration
  • Mail application for voter registration
  • Application in person at certain government
    agencies, including public assistance offices and
    agencies that provided services to people with
    disabilities

22
The Problem with Motor-Voter
Voter Registration
Voter Turnout
Motivation and/or interest in politics
23
Increasing Voter Turnout
  • Voting by Mail Some countries extend the
    opportunity to vote by mail to those who are not
    away from their election district. Canada, Spain,
    The United Kingdom, Germany, Finland, Iceland,
    and Denmark will all send ballots to any
    interested citizen. Use of voting by mail
    services varies widely almost 40 percent use it
    in Finland, only four percent in the United
    Kingdom. In 1998, Oregon passed a ballot
    initiative that replaced typical polling-place
    voting with a statewide vote by mail program.
    Other states including Colorado, Florida,
    Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New
    Mexico, North Dakota, and Washington State
    allow mail-in voting at one level or another.
  • Voting Early Some countries increase turnout by
    extending the period of elections. In Sweden any
    voter may vote early at their local post office.
    In 2004, the state of Texas is experimenting with
    early voting polls in selected areas are open
    between seventeen days and four days prior to
    election day.
  • Internet Voting Many people believe that
    internet voting will greatly increase voter
    participation. However, it might also offer
    greater ease of voting to wealthier households.
    Many countries are testing pilot projects. The
    state of California recently commissioned a study
    on the feasibility of internet voting. The panel,
    comprised of more than two dozen experts in the
    field of data security, elections and voter
    participation concluded that "the implementation
    of Internet voting would allow increased access
    to the voting process for millions of potential
    voters who do not regularly participate in our
    elections." But the commission also expressed
    serious concerns about "technological threats to
    the security, integrity and secrecy of Internet
    ballots" and did not recommend a wholesale move
    to Internet voting.
  • Election Day Registration Election Day
    Registration (EDR), also known as "same-day voter
    registration," permits eligible citizens to
    register and vote on Election Day. In the 2000
    election, six states Idaho, Maine, Minnesota,
    New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Wyoming permitted
    voters to register and vote on Election Day.
    These states had considerably higher voter
    participation and registration rates than the
    national average 68 percent voter turnout for
    the EDR states as opposed to 59 percent
    nationwide. Critics contend that same-day
    registration will lead to greater voter fraud.

Source America Votes at pbs.org
lthttp//www.pbs.org/now/politics/votestats.htmlgt
24
Why Dont People Vote?
  • Institutional context
  • Motor-Voter
  • Compulsory voting
  • Election Day registration
  • Voting by mail
  • Internet voting
  • Motivational strategies
  • Personal canvassing
  • Social pressure
  • Enduring personal traits and
    psychological orientations
  • Socialization through programs such as Kids
    Voting USA

25
http//www.podcastingnews.com/2008/10/22/personali
zed-video-paints-grim-future-for-non-voters/
26
Increasing Voter Turnout
  • Voting by mail
  • Voting early
  • Internet voting
  • Election day registration

27
Vote Mobilization
Efforts to increase voter turnout are often
called Get-Out-the-Vote drives, or GOTV.
28
Obama goes door-to-door in Iowa

DES MOINES, Iowa - Democrat knocked on doors in
the Iowa capital Saturday talking up his
opposition to the war in Iraq. At one stop,
Obama got a warm welcome from a woman who said
the visit might persuade her to attend the
Democratic presidential caucus in January, "I'm
flabbergasted that he's here knocking on my
neighborhood door," Jody Degard told reporters
after the visit from the Illinois senator.
29
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30
Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, 1828-2008
The 26th Amendment grants 18-20 year olds the
right to vote
The 19th Amendment grants women the right to vote
31
Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, 1828-2008
32
How Should We Measure Turnout?
33
Voter Turnout as a Political Strategy
With narrow margins of victory, and an electorate
split evenly down the middle, political parties
increasingly battle over voter turnout.
34
Fraud vs. Suppression
The conflicting values of voter integrity and
voter access increasingly frame todays debates
about democracy. Often, measures that prevent
fraud in electionssuch as photo-ID
requirementsmake voting more difficult and
reduce access for legitimate voters. --Spencer
Overton
35
(No Transcript)
36
Vote Mobilization
  • In recent years, political parties have neglected
    traditional get-out-the-vote efforts (e.g.,
    door-to-door canvassing) in favor of appeals to
    narrow and precise market segments.
  • Still, in a recent experiment conducted by two
    Yale professors, voter turnout increased
    substantially (7-12) through personal
    canvassing, only slightly using direct mail, and
    not at all following e-mails and automated
    telephone calls.

37
GOTV Tactics
  • In part, the Republican strategy in 2004 was
    based on mobilizing the 4 million Christian
    evangelicals that (according to Karl Rove) stayed
    home in 2000. Rather than appealing to moderate
    swing voters, Bush focused on increasing
    turnout from the partys conservative base.
  • Effort also focused on key states. In Ohio alone,
    the GOPs grassroots campaign included 3.5
    million phone calls, knocking on 1.1 million
    doors, sending out 3.5 million pieces of
    literature, and the labor of 85,612 volunteers.

38
Add stuff about ACORN
39
Vote Suppression
  • Ballot and machine shortages on Election Day in
    selected precincts.
  • Delays in sending absentee ballots.
  • Vote challenges.
  • Disqualification of provisional ballots.
  • Purges of voter registration lists (e.g., voter
    caging).
  • Misdirection of voters to polling places.
  • Negative advertising designed to undermine
    morale.

40
Vote Suppression
The following are some ways in which voter
turnout can be selectively suppressed to the
advantage of one party over the other
  • Ballot and machine shortages on Election Day in
    selected precincts.
  • Delays in sending absentee ballots.
  • Vote challenges.
  • Disqualification of provisional ballots.
  • Purges of voter registration lists (e.g., voter
    caging).
  • Misdirection of voters to polling places.
  • Negative advertising designed to undermine
    morale.

Of the 1,509 incidents reported to the Election
Incident Reporting System (EIRS), 548 occurred in
Ohioa state Bush won by just over 100,000 votes.
41
Has Motor-Voter Increased Ballot Fraud?
Nashawna Prude, 9, with a family photo that
includes her grandmother, Kimberly, second from
left, jailed for more than a year for voter
fraud. Kimberly Prude was convicted of voting
while on probation, an offense that she
attributes to confusion over eligibility.
42
Has Motor-Voter Increased Ballot Fraud?
We spend quite a lot of time and money trying to
increasing voter turnout. Why not devote equal
effort to ensuring that election procedures and
eligibility requirements are upheld?
  • "Operation Big Vote" in the St. Louis area was
    used by Democrats to register more
    African-American voters and get them to the
    voting booth on Election Day. They delivered
    3,800 voter registration cards to the St. Louis
    Elections Board on the February 7, 2001, nearly
    all of them fraudulent. Many of the applications
    sought to register prominent people, dead or
    alive - as well as at least three deceased
    aldermen and a dog.

But how do we know when weve go too far?
  • In 2000, the state of Florida hired a private
    firm named ChoicePoint to cleanse its voter
    rolls of felons who were ineligible to vote. The
    company produced a list of 8,000 names to remove
    from the registration rolls, only to find later
    that none had committed felonies, only
    misdemeanors. Critics argued the process unfairly
    targeted African-American voters.

43
The Debate over Photo IDs
It's outrageous to hear my colleagues sit there
and say that the Republican Party is embarking on
a move to suppress the vote of ethnic minorities
throughout the country. That is blatantly false.
I am not going to sit here and by my silence give
any credence to that assertion. That's
ridiculous." Rep. John Doolittle (R-CA)
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