Unit 6 pt1

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Campaigning and Voting in America Campaigning and Voting in America Ms. Suzie Nestico Ms. Suzie Nestico Grade 12 – Principles of Democracy Grade 12 – Principles of Democracy

description

Voting and the American election process

Transcript of Unit 6 pt1

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Campaigning and Voting in AmericaCampaigning and Voting in AmericaMs. Suzie NesticoMs. Suzie Nestico

Grade 12 – Principles of DemocracyGrade 12 – Principles of Democracy

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A. National ConventionB. Direct Primary ElectionsC. Nominating PetitionD. Caucus

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A. National Convention (Presidential Elections Only) 1. Held every four years

2. Nominates presidential candidate 3. Nominates VP candidate 4. Develops the party’s platform

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B. Direct Primary Elections (most other elections)1. Open Primary - voters may vote for

any party’s candidate

2. Closed Primary - voters may only vote for candidates within their registered party.

3. Caucus --Iowa Caucuses

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C. Nominating Petition1. Used primarily at the local level**Robert Belfanti - PA State

Representative was recently replaced. Who were some of the candidates circulating petitions for this office?

2. Candidate circulates petitions obtaining voter signatures to be put on the election ballot

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D. Caucus

1. Old caucuses vs. today’s caucus

2. Andrew Jackson - elections of 1824 and 1828

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A. Keynote Speech - Day 1B. Committee Reports - Day 2C. Nominee is Chosen - Day 3D. Balance the Ticket - Day 3E. VP nominee Chosen - Day 4F. Acceptance Speeches - Day 4

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A. Keynote Speech - Day One **person chosen provides a speech intended to

rally and increase the ‘hype’ of the convention-Who gave Democratic and Republican Speeches

in 2008 Campaign?

B. Committee Reports - Day Two 1. Credentials Committee - examines qualified

delegates from each state 2. Platform Committee - presents the direction of the

party’s overall platform in the upcoming election.

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C. Nominee is chosen - Day Three 1. State delegates vote on the nominees presented by the states for the party’s presidential nominee for general election -”State delegates” is comparable to what voting body in the general election in the fall?

D. Balance the Ticket - Day Three 1. Nominations are taken for VP candidate

2. Usually chose someone slightly different with alternate characteristics and beliefs to appeal to a greater number of voters. -What were the implications of this in Decision ‘08?

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E. VP Nominee is Officially Chosen - Day Four1. Delegates vote on Vice Presidential

Nominee for their party.

F. Acceptance Speeches & Close - Day Four1. All Nominees deliver acceptance

speeches2. Close of party business and plans to

move on with heart of campaign

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“I made the canvass on my own horse; my entertainment, being at the houses of my friends, cost me nothing; and my only outlay was $.75 for a barrel of cider, which some farm-hands insisted I treat them to.”

~Abe Lincoln describing his 1846 run for Congress

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Usual Positions in a CampaignCampaign ManagerTreasurerPress SecretaryMedia ConsultantSpeech WritersPolicy AdvisorsFundraisers

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Information Gathering Finding the VotersCanvassingMass Media CoverageEndorsementPresidential Debates (televised)

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1976 – approx. $456 Million spent on Federal Campaigning

1988 – 1992 – over $3 Billion spent

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Sources:Individual candidates themselves (Kennedy,

Bush, Kerry, Clinton)

Other Individual ContributionsLimited by a series of Federal Regulatory Acts in the

‘70’sLimits individual contributions to $1,000

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Sources (con’t.)PAC’s – Political Action Committees

Organizations created by interest groups to channel money to political candidates

PAC contributions limited to $5,000 H0WEVER there is no limit to how much money a PAC can spend on supporting a candidate’s campaign

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Ending Discriminatory LawsPoll taxesLiteracy testsGrandfather clause

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26th Amendment – extends voting rights to 18 yr olds

Australian ballot – “secret ballot”

Poll watchers

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Who votes?Socioeconomic Status – refers to a combination of an individual’s social characteristics, such as age and education, and economic status, such as occupation and income

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I. Voting A. Types of Participation B. Turnout Trends C. Who Votes? II. Elections A. The Election Process B. Money and Elections C. Variations in Federal Elections D. How Voters Decide

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Voting◦ Historical Expansion of the Franchise◦ Voting for Multiple Offices at◦ Different Levels

Voting beyond Elections for Office◦ – Referenda◦ – Initiatives◦ – Recall

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Conventional: Petitions◦ Letters to representatives◦ Campaign Activity (Canvassing; Money)◦ Regular Protest

Unconventional: Disruptive Protest March (Seattle, Genoa)◦ Occupying/Blocking Access to◦ Buildings (Abortion Clinics)◦ Vandalism (Greenpeace)◦ Political Violence (Oklahoma City, 9-11)

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Why is turnout so low?◦ – Difficulty in Registration◦ – Number and Frequency of Elections◦ – Weak Political Parties◦ – Voter Apathy

Voting is Related to:◦ – Age◦ – Income◦ – Education◦ – Race

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YES: Legitimacy of System◦ Potential Policy Bias◦ Functional Disenfranchisement

NO: Opportunity for All◦ Most Informed/Interested are◦ Participating◦ Non-voting and Contentment◦ Participation and Discontent

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Voting on the Basis of Party Loyalty Voting on the Basis of Policy Issues

◦ – Prospective?◦ – Retrospective?◦ – General or Specific?

Voting on the Basis of Candidate Image