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Presidential Elections

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Title: Presidential Elections


1
Presidential Elections
  • The Parties
  • The campaigns
  • Electing the president
  • The electoral college
  • Bushs victories why and what it means
  • The video

2
The Parties
  • Not originally planned
  • A desire to avoid factions
  • Party development
  • The federalists and anti-federalists
  • Anti-federalists believed in states rights and
    eventually the Democrats took on this stance.
  • The Whigs were the party of the aristocracy and a
    strong central government.
  • Their interest was a stable government and one
    which aided economic development through active
    participation.

3
The Parties and the Irony
  • The Republican party moved from a position of
    strong central government to one of government
    is best which governs least and the Democrats
    have moved from a states rights party to the
    defender of a strong central government and a
    strong welfare system.
  • The Democrats lost the South when they
    supported civil rights for blacks.

4
The Republican Party
  • Established in 1856 as a third party behind the
    Democrats and Whigs
  • Replaced the Whigs by the election of 1860 which
    Lincoln won.
  • The main platform was anti-slavery and preserving
    the union and thus was the party of a strong
    central government.
  • The progressive wing
  • Teddy Rooseveltanti-trust suits, national parks,
    and investigating business practices.

Januray
5
Republican Party
  • Political landscapeHøyre to Fremskrittsparti
  • Present Platform
  • Tax reduction (70 of which goes to the upper
    20)
  • Defense build-up
  • Pro-business legislationderegulation of
    government restrictions
  • Unilateralism and pre-emptive strikes
  • Spreading democracy
  • Roll back environmental legislation
  • Project for the New American Century

6
The Republican Party
  • Constituency
  • Geographically
  • The south (ever since the Democrats passed civil
    rights legislation in the 1960s)
  • The mid-west
  • The suburbs
  • Sociologically
  • Middle, upper-middle and upper classes
  • Business people
  • Evangelicals

7
The Democrats
  • Political landscapeHøyre/Venstre
  • The Party of Jefferson and Jackson
  • Dominated politics until Lincoln
  • The party of the people vs. the Whigs
  • Pressured for the Bill of Rights
  • Supported the rise of the unions
  • Wilson, FDR, Kennedy Clinton

8
The Democrats
  • Present Platform
  • The third way
  • Balance the needs of business and the rights of
    the people. Shares some economic concerns with
    Republicans, but are more concerned about the
    working class, environment, diplomacy and
    minorities.
  • Progressive tendencies
  • FDRsocial welfare
  • Kennedy/Johnsoncivil rights
  • Carterequal rights

9
The Democrats
  • Constituency
  • Geographically
  • The coasts, New England and the industrial
    mid-west (Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Michigan,
    Wisconsin, Minnesota)
  • Urban areas
  • Sociologically/politically
  • The working class
  • Middle-class
  • Minorities
  • Jews
  • Intellectuals
  • Environmentalists

10
Presidential Elections
  • The President and Congress are elected separately
  • The nature of Washington politics
  • Gridlock
  • Weak party structure, regional differences and
    horse trading
  • Lobbying and external influence
  • Can lead to corruption as big money is at stake

11
Flow Chart
  • Steps In Selecting A President
  • Candidate Declares Intention to Run for Office
  • Candidates Campaign for Delegates in State
    Primaries
  • Primary Elections, Caucases, and Conventions are
    Held in the States
  • National Party Conventions Choose Nominees for
    President and Vice-president
  • Voters Choose Presidential Electors in each State
    in the November General Election
  • Electoral College Casts Its Votes for President
    in January
  • The President and Vice-president are Inaugurated
    on January 20

12
The Campaign
  • Positioning
  • Each potential candidate must find financial
    backing and create national recognition
  • The process starts 2-3 years before the election
  • Internet campaign funding
  • Avoids special interest funding
  • Obama has made a big deal about this and runs as
    an outsider
  • Announcing candidacy1 year in advance

13
The Campaign
  • The primaries
  • A democratic idea gone amok?
  • Meet the people, press the flesh
  • Iowa New Hampshire
  • Creating momentum, getting financial support
  • Winning delegates
  • The national conventions August September
  • A foregone conclusion, but who is the V.P.
    candidate?
  • National exposurewatch Obamas jump in the polls

14
The General Election Campaign
  • From Labor Day to November
  • Focuses on swing states
  • The debates
  • Body language and appearance are important
  • Confidence Image
  • Performing above expectations
  • Meet the press
  • Newspaper endorsements

15
The Cost
  • The vicious cycle
  • Money to buy time to get donations to buy time on
    TV
  • The cost 1.2 billion
  • You cant win without money
  • The best president money can buy
  • Campaign contributions are investments
  • Recent lobbying scandalsJack Abramoff
  • Dependence on campaign funding corrupts

16
The Medias Role
  • Image vs. content Total makeover
  • Looking presidential
  • The debates and Meet the Press
  • The character issue
  • The person not the platform
  • A 1 ½ party system
  • The vicious cycle and media control
  • What is projected Image
  • Sound bites The average ad is 10 second
  • Cost and corruption

17
The Candidates Image
  • In 2004, an questionnaire showed that only 10 of
    the voters voted on the basis of issues.
  • The winning image personal qualities such as
    honest, simple, straight-talking, God fearing,
    determined, decisive, likeable
  • This leads to personal attacks and draws the
    focus away from issues.

18
When Things Get Tough, the Candidates Get Dirty
  • Attack ads
  • McCain attacked Obamas education policy focusing
    on what he called sex education for kindergarten
    pupils.
  • McCain tried to pain Obama as a vacuous
    celebrity like Britney Spires and Paris Hilton
  • Obama linked McCain to lost jobs at DHL
  • The candidates must respond or look like wooses,
    but the attacks turn off the public.

19
The national election
  • 1st Tuesday after the 1st Monday in Nov.
  • The popular vote
  • The Electoral College vote
  • Electoral College as a compromise between the
    larger and small states
  • 538 voteseach states representatives in
    Congress
  • If one wins the 11 most populated states one can
    lose the rest.

20
The National Election
  • The Electoral College and the Campaign
  • Campaigning is limited to the big and/or the
    swing states which limits contact
  • Election day
  • Low voter turnoutapprox. 50
  • Difficulty in registration, lack of interest
  • 2008 an exception, near 70
  • Weatherthe Republicans hope for bad weather in
    the industrial mid-west states and the coasts

21
Electoral College Votes 2008
  • Note the two parties regions and changes

22
Note the shift from 1960-2004
23
Trends
  • The South has gone Republican
  • A result of the Democrats campaign for civil
    rights
  • Before the Civil Rights Acts, the South had
    virtual apartheid
  • When President Johnson, a Texan, sign the acts he
    stated that he was signing away the South to the
    Republicans
  • Movement to the Sunbelt and increased influence
    of these states
  • Movement among Hispanics who were Democrats but
    showed movement to the Republicans on the basis
    of moral issuesanti-gay, anti-abortion

24
A Possible Shift Back for the Democrats
  • The Southern states may not be as solid
    Republican as they have been since 1965.
  • Afro-American population in the South
  • Louisiana35 (9 Electoral College votes)
  • Mississippi39 (6 Electoral College votes)
  • Alabama28 (9 Electoral College votes)
  • Georgia32 (15 Electoral College votes)
  • South Carolina30 (8 Electoral College votes)
  • 92 of Afro-American voters vote for the
    Democrats

25
Recent Scandals
  • Abramoff American politics at its dirtiest
  • Lobbying and corruptionwhere does information
    stop and bribery begin?
  • Abramoff has pleaded guilty to influence peddling
    (arranging meeting with influential politicians
    for a fee) and shows up on pictures at the Oval
    Office with guess who and his clients.
  • He has been indicted for embezzlement and bribery
    (it is estimated that he influenced 60 members of
    Congress illegally).
  • He helped Tyco avoid off shore taxes bragging
    that he had good relations with member of
    Congress.

26
Recent Scandals
  • Election fraud
  • There are 3000 counties in the US with its own
    election board and election official are partisan
  • In both Florida and Ohio, the Secretary of State
    (responsible for the election) was also the
    campaign manager for Bush
  • The problem of accurate vote counting has not be
    remedied in Ohio

27
Recent Scandals cont.
  • The two largest provider of voting machines
    donate large amounts to the Republican party
  • Let them vote, because we are doing the
    counting.a statement made by the president of
    one of the companies one year before the 2004
    election
  • Why was there a discrepancy between the exit
    polls and the final count in Ohio?

28
What the New President Inherited
  • Iraq war costs--3 trillion plus Afghanistan
  • National Debt 11 trillion
  • 2009 budget deficit--482 billion (est)
  • A slowing economy with negative GDP growth
  • Rising unemployment5, now 10
  • Rising health care costs47 million Americans
    have no health insurance
  • Discresionary budget items 38 of the budget

29
Abandoned Houses
30
After the Housing Bubble Popped
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vjmeHiFZUWtE

31
What a Difference a Day Makes
  • Obamas foreign policy
  • A new tone
  • No longer black and white, we against the world
    thinking.
  • Dialogue versus confrontation
  • An understanding that we cannot dictate results

32
Obama and China
  • A new tone and new priorities
  • Cooperation on key issues economy and
    environment
  • China is the major lender to the U.S. and holds
    1.5 trillion in U.S. paper.
  • No longer an emphasis on civil rights infractions
    inspite of the fact that they are increasing a
    more diplomatic tone

33
Obama and Russia
  • Russia Has the bear awoken or is it back
    broken?
  • They want to be a player, but their economy is in
    shambles and they are moving towards the old
    authoritarian state.
  • Tricky issues The rocket shield, Georgia and
    Ukraine in NATO.
  • Nuclear disarmament

34
Obama and Israel
  • Further expansion of the settlements
  • and expropriation of Palestinian houses is
    unacceptible
  • The Israelis are suspicious of Obamas
    intensions.
  • What they dont understand is his tendency to
    look at both sides of the question
  • A two states solution is the only one

35
Obama and the Middle-East
  • A complicated formula
  • Russia has good relations with Iran and thus is
    important for a solution
  • U.S. and Syria must talk, but Syria supports
    Hizbollah and Hamas
  • Syria and Israel must resolve the Golan Heights
    issue
  • Iran has strong influence in Irak.

36
Afghanistan
  • A mistake?
  • Afghanistan consists of warlord controlled areas.
  • It is not a unified country, but a collection of
    fiefdoms with conflicting interests.
  • The main economic source poppies
  • Can the war be won and at what price?

37
Obama and Latin America
  • The relationship was put on hold during the Bush
    administration
  • There was a considerable move to the left
  • Chavez, Morales, Lula
  • The development of Banco del Sur could take
    Latin America out of the grasp of IMF
  • Venezuela is no strategic threat to the
    USAObama, but has developed an alliance with
    Russia and bought Russian weapons

38
Domestic Issues
  • Health care reform
  • Environment
  • Education

39
Obama and Latin America
  • Where to start to improve Latin American
    relations
  • Cubalifting restrictions on visits and money
    transfersdone. Lifting restrictions on
    investments and businessdo be done.
  • Honduras
  • Colombiaopening new bases??
  • The School of Americas??

40
The Video
  • Coverage of the Republican primaries to choose
    the Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate
  • The video does not touch on the presidential
    campaign, but describes campaigning in general
  • Total make-over, image creation, the campaign
    trail and dirty tricks.
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