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Elections

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Elections Wilson Chapter 8 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Elections


1
Elections
  • Wilson Chapter 8

2
Lets start with elections
Elections
  • Presidential vs Congressional races
  • Presidential races are more competitive but in
    either, the incumbent usually wins!!! Also
    presidential races are closer in the final voting
  • Smaller turnout in congressional races means the
    candidate must appeal to the party voter!!
  • Members of congress can do things the pres. Cant
    such as claiming direct help for the people of
    the state such as job programs
  • Members of congress can claim they are not part
    of the Washington mess

3
Coattails??
  • Lots of incumbents get reelected to Congress for
    the last three reasons on the previous slide
  • It used to be that the president of your party
    would almost automatically mean youd get elected
    if he was popular but not so much any more

4
How to be the President
  • First you have to be mentioned in the media
  • It takes a lot of WORK!!!
  • Come from various backgrounds including
    governors, senators, members of congress or war
    heros
  • You need money, lots of money and a lot comes
    from PACs. Individuals can only give 2000 while
    a PAC can give 5000. To get matching funds you
    must get donations from 20 different
    statesconfusing??
  • It gets worse

5
More Mr. or Mrs. President
  • You need a huge organization of fundraisers,
    lawyers, secretaries, advertising, accountants
    and volunteers!!! You also need advisors and
    someone to write papers and speeches
  • What about campaign strategy
  • Tone positive or negative
  • Theme a simple appealing idea to repeat
  • Timing focus on primaries or the convention
  • Target who to aim at, those who change vote
    perhaps or certain groups like farmers

6
How about Congress????
  • First, how many to elect?? It depends on the
    size of the state, districts and their shapes
  • Congress decided in 1911 to set the House at 435
    seats and in 1929 to reapportion every 10 years
  • So some states lose seats while others gain
  • District boundaries are always
  • redrawn to cheat the system
  • called malapportionment
  • and gerrymandering

7
Okay, now lets get elected
  • First you need signatures and then win the
    primary
  • Once elected you quickly learn to take care of
    your constituents by ensuring you do what they
    want
  • Congressional members are trustees and delegates
  • Delegates want to be reelected more than anything
    and will do whatever it takes
  • Trustees tend to look at bigger picture that has
    fewer implications for their home district

8
Qualifications for all the jobs
  • House of Representatives
  • 25 years old citizen for 7 years live in
    state
  • Senator
  • 30 years old citizen for 9 years live in
    state
  • President
  • 35 years old born in USA

9
Primary vs general campaigns
  • Primary elections choose a parties candidates
    sort of like the playoffs
  • General elections pick the winners who will
    actually hold office the championship
  • Very different group of voters and helpers
  • You must rally the troops for each primary
    reaching for the extremes of your party then
    often back off in the general election
  • People who get involved in primaries are the
    hard core political activists!!!

10
Campaign issues
  • Position issues opposing viewpoints usually
    along partisan lines (security, defense,
    abortion, gay marriage)
  • Valence issues viewpoints in which the public
    is united and rival candidates follow similar
    positions hoping to gain popular support - as if
    they were on the same side as the public (social
    security, welfare)

11
Role of the media
  • Name recognition from TV spots and even news (low
    cost and reliable)
  • Debates usually only advantage to challenger -
    performance is huge (Reagan, Kennedy)
  • Careful not to slip up so rely on stock
    speeches and proven themes for applause
  • Internet great for direct mail campaigns
  • So worried about reelection that campaigning and
    government are linked together - candidates need
    media consultants to succeed

12
Show me the
  • Presidential primaries - public and private
    with federal matching funds for donations over
    250 per individual
  • Presidential general elections all public money
    totaling 74 million in 2004
  • Congressional elections are mostly private
  • Up to 2000 per individual and 5000 for PACs

13
Rules about
  • Watergate and illegal donations in 1972 created
    1974 Campaign Reform law and FEC
  • Set limit then of 1000 per individual
  • Guidelines for PACs
  • Guidelines for public funding of elections
  • Loopholes
  • Soft money is unlimited as long as its given to
    a political party
  • PACs can spend as much as they want as long as
    its not coordinated with a candidate

14
More recent changes
  • Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act of 2000
    created 3 big changes!!!
  • Banned soft money to national parties from
    corporations and unions
  • Raised individual limit to 2000
  • Sharply restricted independent expenditures -
    groups cant use their own money in an ad
    referring to a specific candidate 30 days before
    a primary and 60 days before a general election
    (positive or negative ads)

15
Court challenges and 527s
  • The previous act was immediately challenged in
    court as a violation of free speech but the
    Supreme Court upheld the new laws
  • Both parties have 527 organizations that can
    spend soft money like before and can spend
    their money on politics.
  • In 2009, a Federal Appeals Court ruled that 527s
    have a First Amendment right to raise and spend
    freely to influence elections so long as they do
    not coordinate their activities with a candidate
    or a party
  • 527s raised and spent 333 million in 2004

16
2010 527 Spending
17
Money and winning
  • Presidential candidates all get federal money
  • During peacetime three key factors
  • Party affiliation
  • Economy (called pocketbook voting)
  • Candidates character
  • cant forget VP candidates role,
  • religion, and the media

I WIN, I WIN
18
Who decides who wins???
  • Party affiliation? Republicans vote more than
    Democrats and are more wed to their party
  • More independents vote Republican
  • Issues (economy) or strong principles (abortion)
    judging the incumbents' performance, and timing
    of elections (midterm or not)
  • The campaign negative or positive, core values
    and character, themes over detailed issues
    (single issue voters vote in blocks)
  • A winning coalition loyalty to a party,
    specific ethnic or religious voters, volume of
    voters

19
A little election history
  • Broad election trends
  • 1876-1896 very competitive among parties
  • 1896-1932 Republicans dominant
  • 1932-1952 Democrats dominant
  • 1952-now changed hands frequently
  • Public policy has remained pretty much the same
    and pace of change has been moderate thanks to
    the Constitution!!!
  • Elections are important but tend to be voter
    judgments of the president and congress
  • Political parties have less sway over voters

20
  • In the US, strong shifts in public policies have
    usually paralleled realignments.
  • One exception is 1964, when mass election of
    Democrats gave rise to programs such as Medicare
    and Medicaid, federal aid to education and local
    law enforcement, two dozen environmental and
    consumer-protection laws, the Voting Rights Act
    of 1965, and other massive, sweeping changes.
  • In 1980, the voters brought in a much more
    conservative Congress, led by Reagan, who made
    cuts on many excess programs and tried to
    reduced spending.
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