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Political Parties, Campaigns and Elections

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Title: Political Parties, Campaigns and Elections


1
Political Parties, Campaigns and Elections
  • Pt. 2

2
(No Transcript)
3
Comparison
  • Class quiz
  • National survey
  • (Welch, p. 208)

4
Presidential Elections
  • Electoral College Each state has a number of
    electors equal to its total number of Senators
    plus Representatives. (DC also has three, as a
    result of a Constitutional amendment.)
  • SC 2 Sens. 6 Reps. 8 electoral votes.
  • NC 2 Sens. 13 Reps. 15 electoral votes.
  • 435 Reps. 100 Sens. 3 for DC 538 total.
  • In order to be elected, a candidate must receive
    a majority of this vote, (538/2) 1, or 270.


5
Presidential Elections
  • If no candidate gets a majority, the House of
    Representatives elects the President, and the
    Senate elects the Vice President this has
    happened twice, in 1800 and 1824.

6
Presidential ElectionsHow Many Times Has This
Happened?
  • The two major Presidential candidates were the
    son of a former President and a Democrat from
    Tennessee.
  • The election was close, controversial, and
    bitterly contested.
  • The Democrat from Tennessee got more popular
    votes.
  • The former Presidents son got more electoral
    votes, and was elected.

7
Presidential ElectionsHow Many Times Has This
Happened?
  • The two major Presidential candidates were the
    son of a former President and a Democrat from
    Tennessee.
  • The election was close, controversial, and
    bitterly contested.
  • The Democrat from Tennessee got more popular
    votes.
  • The former Presidents son got more electoral
    votes, and was elected.
  • John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, 1824.

8
Electoral College
  • We do not have a national election for President
    and Vice President, but rather 51 separate
    elections one in each state plus Washington,
    DC.
  • When you go to the polls, you are casting a
    popular vote, but you are actually voting for the
    electors who are pledged to your particular
    candidate. For example, if you voted for
    Bush/Cheney in South Carolina, you were actually
    voting for the electors chosen by the South
    Carolina Republican Party. When Bush and Cheney
    won the popular vote in South Carolina, all eight
    Republican electors were chosen to cast the
    states electoral vote.

9
Electoral College
  • Electors are generally chosen by their state
    party organizations. They are usually people who
    have been active on the partys behalf U.S.
    Senators and Representatives are ineligible to be
    electors.)
  • The Constitution provides that state legislatures
    choose the means by which the states electors
    are chosen all states, plus DC, have laws
    providing that the electors are chosen by popular
    vote. However, if the 2000 election controversy
    in Florida had not been resolved by the deadline
    for certifying electors, the legislature was
    prepared to pass a law simply naming the 25
    Republican electors to cast the states electoral
    votes.

10
Electoral College
  • In 48 states plus DC, the candidate with the most
    popular votes wins all of the states electoral
    votes.
  • Maine and Nebraska award one electoral vote to
    the person who wins the most popular votes in
    each Congressional District, and two to the
    winner of the state at large. Thus, they could
    theoretically split their votes, with one partys
    candidate winning one or two votes and the other
    partys candidate winning the rest.
  • If you vote for the losing candidate in your
    state, your vote is essentially wasted you wont
    be represented in the Electoral College.
  • Its possible to win the popular vote but lose
    the electoral vote (just ask Al Gore!)
  • The electoral vote determines the winner.

11
Some election returns from 2000

12
Some election returns from 2000

13
Some election returns from 2000

14
Some election returns from 2000

15
Some election returns from 2000

16
Some election returns from 2000

17
Some election returns from 2000

18
Some election returns from 2000

19
Some election returns from 2000

20
Some election returns from 2000

21
Some election returns from 2000

22
Some election returns from 2000

23
Electoral College
  • The way the Electoral College is structured, the
    small states actually have a disproportionate
    amount of influence.
  • California has 53 Reps. and Wyoming has one.
  • California has 53 2 electors, or 55.
  • Wyoming has 1 2 electors, or 3.
  • California, with 53 times the population of
    Wyoming, has only 17-2/3 times as many electors.
    In other words, an individual voter in Wyoming
    has three times as much clout in the Electoral
    College than does an individual voter in
    California even though the state of California
    has 17-2/3 times as much clout as the state of
    Wyoming!

24
Electoral Strategy
  • The existence of the Electoral College, rather
    than a system using one national election,
    affects campaign strategies in significant ways.
  • The states which get the candidates attention
    are the large, politically competitive states.
  • California has 20 of the electoral votes needed
    to win the election, and one extra voter in
    California could decide the election.
  • Illinois, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Florida
    get lots of attention as well.
  • Texas was traditionally a Democratic state, which
    is now predominantly Republican New York was
    traditionally a competitive state which is now
    predominantly Democratic.

25
Electoral Strategy
  • The states which get no attention are the small
    states and those which are overwhelmingly in
    favor of one party or the other.
  • 2004 election
  • Utah (5 electoral votes) Bush 73
  • D.C. (3 electoral votes) Kerry 90
  • There is no need for the Republican Presidential
    candidate to campaign in Utah, because he does
    not need to there is no point in the Democratic
    candidate campaigning there, because there is
    nothing he can do to win. The reverse is true in
    D.C. So Utah and D.C. are ignored by both sides.
    If we had one national election, in which each
    vote counted equally, candidates would be just as
    likely to pursue votes in Utah or Washington, DC,
    as they are in California or Illinois.

26
Why Dont We Change This?
  • Electoral College reform is occasionally
    discussed (as was the case after the 2000
    election), but it is unlikely that the Electoral
    College will be abolished. Doing so would
    require a Constitutional amendment, which would
    have to be ratified by three-quarters of the
    states enough states benefit from the Electoral
    College the way it exists now so that they would
    not be inclined to vote for an amendment
    abolishing it.

27
Do the Electors Have to Vote for the Person Who
Won Their State?
  • No.
  • A faithless elector is a member of the Electoral
    College who does not vote for the candidate who
    won his or her state. Some states have laws
    prohibiting faithless electors, but the
    Constitution does not restrict the electors from
    voting as they choose. (South Carolina imposes a
    fine of 500 for faithless electors. This may be
    unconstitutional, but theres a great deal of
    peer pressure from the parties for the electors
    to support the candidates they were expected to
    support.)
  • In 2000, Bush won 271 electoral votes and Gore
    267. Because Gore won more popular votes, there
    was an effort to persuade three Bush electors to
    be faithless and switch to Gore. If they had
    done so, and Gore had won 270 votes, he would
    have been elected President. (Gore actually
    received only 266 votes, because one Democratic
    elector from Washington, DC, abstained.) In 2004,
    one Minnesota elector apparently voted for John
    Edwards for both President and Vice President.
  • No faithless elector has ever altered the outcome
    of an election.

28
Money and Politics
  • For most of our history, money in politics was
    largely unregulated, and there was no
    accountability. There was no way to tell how
    much candidates raised or spent, where the money
    came from, or where it went.

29
Public Financing ofPresidential Campaigns
  • In 1971, Congress enacted public financing of
    Presidential campaigns, through the Presidential
    Election Campaign Act. On the tax form, there is
    a checkbox allowing you to designate 3.00
    (originally 1.00) to go to the Presidential
    Campaign Fund. When you designate the money in
    this way, it goes into the fund, where it is
    gathered with others contributions and collects
    interest until the next Presidential campaign
    begins.

30
Matching Funds
  • A candidate in a Presidential primary who raises
    10,000 in 250 contributions in each of 25
    states (thus showing a broad national base of
    support) is eligible for matching funds from the
    Campaign Fund. Each dollar the candidate raises
    thereafter is eligible for a dollar from the fund
    thus, the candidate ends up with a total of
    2.00.

31
Matching Funds
  • Until the current election, almost all candidates
    have sought matching funds, because it doubles
    the money they have available for their primary
    campaigns however, accepting these funds
    requires agreeing to spending limits in each
    state, and other restrictions on how the money
    can be spent.

32
Matching Funds
  • In 2000, George W. Bush did not accept matching
    funds in his campaign for the Republican
    Presidential nomination he raised more through
    private contributions, and did not have to abide
    by the restrictions which were imposed by the
    acceptance of matching funds. Bush raised more
    on his own than the total he would have received
    if he had agreed to be bound by the regulations
    on matching funds.

33
Matching Funds
  • In 2004, Howard Dean, John Kerry and President
    Bush all turned down matching funds.
  • In 2008, almost all of the major candidates for
    nomination in both parties rejected matching
    funds in order to raise and spend as much as they
    can on their own. John Edwards was the only major
    candidate who took matching funds.

34
Are Candidates Better Off With or Without
Matching Funds?
  • 2008 expenditure limits w/matching funds
  • Total primary campaign 42.5 Million
  • New Hampshire primary 841,000
  • (State limits are based on population, not
    strategic importance of primary)
  • On their own, candidates have raised

35
Are Candidates Better Off With or Without
Matching Funds?
  • 2008 expenditure limits w/matching funds
  • Total primary campaign 42.5 Million
  • New Hampshire primary 841,000
  • (State limits are based on population, not
    strategic importance of primary)
  • On their own, candidates have raised
  • McCain 75 million

36
Are Candidates Better Off With or Without
Matching Funds?
  • 2008 expenditure limits w/matching funds
  • Total primary campaign 42.5 Million
  • New Hampshire primary 841,000
  • (State limits are based on population, not
    strategic importance of primary)
  • On their own, candidates have raised
  • McCain 75 million
  • Clinton 175 million

37
Are Candidates Better Off With or Without
Matching Funds?
  • 2008 expenditure limits w/matching funds
  • Total primary campaign 42.5 Million
  • New Hampshire primary 841,000
  • (State limits are based on population, not
    strategic importance of primary)
  • On their own, candidates have raised
  • McCain 75 million
  • Clinton 175 million
  • Obama 234 million
  • (usatoday.com, April 7,
    2008)

38
Matching Funds
  • The entire general election campaign for the
    Democratic and Republican parties is paid by the
    campaign fund.
  • Each candidate will receive 84.1 million.
  • Third party and independent candidates qualify by
    receiving 5 of the vote in the previous
    election.
  • Ross Perot, 1992, self-financed (60M)
    independent, got 19 of vote
  • Ross Perot, 1996 Reform Party nominee, recd.
    matching funds, got 9
  • Pat Buchanan, 2000 Reform Party nominee, recd.
    matching funds, got
  • No parties other than Dem. and Rep. received
    matching funds in 2004, or will in 2008.

39
Federal Election Campaign Act
  • Following the Watergate scandal (which revolved,
    in part, around campaign-finance irregularities),
    Congress enacted the Federal Election Campaign
    Act (FECA) of 1974. This Act imposes
    restrictions on the amount of money which a
    Congressional (House or Senate) candidate may
    raise from specific sources.

40
Federal Election Campaign Act
  • Federal election candidates for House, Senate,
    President
  • An individual may contribute 2300 per election
    (primary, runoff or general)
  • A Political Action Committee (PAC) may contribute
    5,000 per election (primary, runoff or general)
  • Individual limit was 1000 until 2002
  • Raised to 2000 and now adjusted for inflation.

41
Federal Election Campaign Act
  • The FECA is administered and enforced by the
    Federal Election Commission (FEC), a government
    agency. A candidate for Congress must file
    quarterly reports with the FEC showing how money
    he or she has raised, who contributed at least
    200 to the campaign, and what the contributors
    do for a living (thus showing if the candidate is
    unduly dependent on a particular industry for
    campaign contributions).
  • You can look up contributions at
    opensecrets.org.

42
Political Action Committees (PACs)
  • Specialized interest groups whose purpose is to
    contribute to campaigns. Members of a group,
    industry or company pool their money and
    contribute in the name of the PAC.
  • From Congress lecture PACs are much more likely
    to contribute to incumbents than to challengers,
    thus giving incumbents even more of an
    overwhelming fundraising advantage than they
    would otherwise enjoy.

43
Political Action Committees (PACs)
  • There is a controversy over what, exactly, PACs
    get for their money. Are they buying elected
    officials, or are they simply contributing to the
    election of candidates who share their goals
    (which is perfectly legal)? It is virtually
    certain that PAC contributions lead to greater
    access to the officials whom they choose to
    support, but its impossible to prove that
    campaign contributions lead to specific votes or
    other actions

44
Campaign Finance Issues
  • Loopholes in the current finance system
  • The FEC is weak and understaffed. It takes
    several years to conduct an audit of a campaign
    to discover irregularities or violations of the
    finance laws, and all the FEC can do to punish it
    is to impose a fine usually, lower than the
    amount of the violation and which can be paid out
    of campaign funds. This is an incentive for
    candidates and campaigns to violate the law in
    the interest of advancing their campaigns.

45
Campaign Finance Issues
  • Soft money is money given to a political party,
    rather than directly to a candidate. It is not
    limited or regulated by the FECA. If I wish to
    support the election of a particular candidate, I
    may contribute 2300 per election to that
    persons campaign but as much as I wish to the
    candidates party. The party may then spend as
    much as it wishes on materials and resources
    supporting that candidate. Soft money is now
    illegal in Federal elections, but whether or not
    it is available to be used in state elections is
    a matter of each individual states laws.

46
Campaign Finance Issues
  • Independent expenditures are campaign efforts
    carried out on behalf of a candidate, but without
    the involvement of that persons campaign. If I
    wish to support a particular person or mobilize
    voters on behalf of a candidate or cause, I may
    spend as much of my own money as I wish to buy
    billboards, bumper stickers, etc., advocating
    that candidates election, as long as I do not
    coordinate my efforts with the candidate or his
    or her campaign.

47
Campaign Finance Issues
  • 527 groups (mentioned in the text on p. 296)
    emerged as a major category of independent
    expenditure group in the 2004 election. Both
    major-party Presidential campaigns accused the
    other of illegally collaborating with 527 groups.
    The Bush campaign accused the Kerry campaign of
    working with moveon.org, while the Kerry campaign
    accused the Bush campaign of working with Swift
    Boat Veterans for Truth.

48
Campaign Finance Issues
  • The FECA as originally written imposed the same
    limits on contributions to ones own campaign as
    applied to other contributors (how much you could
    give yourself). However, in Buckley v. Valeo
    (1976), the Supreme Court ruled that this
    restriction on the expenditure of ones own money
    is a violation of the Constitutional guarantee of
    freedom of speech. (I may spend as much of my
    own money as I wish to get myself elected.) This
    gives an obvious advantage to wealthy candidates
    who can afford to finance their own campaigns,
    without having to ask others for contributions.

49
Campaign Finance Issues
  • In order to curb the influence of
    special-interest money in politics, Congress in
    2002 passed the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act
    (BCRA), also known as McCain-Feingold after its
    sponsors, which took effect the day after the
    2002 elections. This law doubled the limits on
    contributions by individuals and PACs in federal
    elections (from 1000 to 2000 per election for
    an individual, and from 5000 to 10,000 for
    PACs.) The individual amount is now adjusted for
    inflation (currently 2300).

50
Campaign Finance Issues
  • However, it bans the use of soft money in federal
    campaigns, and regulates how groups may purchase
    radio and television ads which pertain to federal
    candidates and elections, within 60 days of an
    election. Both of these provisions have been
    challenged as violations of freedom of speech
    the U.S. Supreme Court upheld most of BCRA in
    2003.

51
Paper Guidelines
  • Papers are now due by the final exam (Sat., May
    3, 1130 AM).
  • Introduction What is your topic? Explain why
    its important. Give documented examples of a
    problem if its something youre trying to
    solve.
  • - These can be done in any order, and you dont
    have to include all of them. This is just a
    guideline
  • Is there legislation about it in Congress? (1st
    writing assignment comes in here.) What do the
    supporters and opponents say about it?
  • Have the Presidential candidates taken a position
    on it? What do they say about it? (3rd writing
    assignment comes in here.)
  • Are interest groups active on this issue (on
    either side or both sides)? What do they say
    about it? (3rd writing assignment again.)
  • What do you think about it? Make an intelligent
    argument in support of your position.
  • Conclusion

52
Sources
  • I will probably have you submit the paper through
    turnitin.com.
  • Cite your sources appropriately. Any method of
    citation is acceptable (MLA, APA, footnotes) as
    long as I can tell where you got your
    information.
  • Feel free to e-mail me with questions, problems,
    etc. Ill be happy to help you find sources.

53
Wikipedia
  • Youre in college, for Gods sake. Dont cite
    the encyclopedia.
  • Jimbo Wales, founder of Wikipedia
  • Problems with Wikipedia
  • Vandalism. Some people have nothing better to do
    with their lives.
  • Unreliability. People just get their facts wrong
    sometimes.
  • Anonymity. Reputable writers sign their names to
    their work.
  • No peer review. If I write an article, its read
    over by other people with recognized authority in
    the field before its published in a reputable
    source.
  • Many others.
  • Dont use it as a primary source. If you get
    information from Wikipedia, trace it back to the
    source the article used, and cite that source.
  • Wikipedia is useful for secondary sources and
    links. Some of the sources cited and linked in a
    Wikipedia article may be useful and reliable
    sources of information for your work. Wikipedia
    is good for a quick look for those types of
    sources.
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