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Political Participation

Political Participation. Why Do People Vote? Who Votes? Do We Care?. Homework. Due Thursday, BEGINNING of Class 3-1, 6-6 3-4 for extra credit (worth 20 points) http://elections.gmu.edu/Voter_Turnout_2004.htm. Pre-1990s Scholarship. Two camps Rational choice theorists

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Political Participation

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  1. Political Participation Why Do People Vote? Who Votes? Do We Care?

  2. Homework • Due Thursday, BEGINNING of Class • 3-1, 6-6 • 3-4 for extra credit (worth 20 points) • http://elections.gmu.edu/Voter_Turnout_2004.htm

  3. Pre-1990s Scholarship • Two camps • Rational choice theorists • “Demographic predictor” researchers

  4. Anthony Downs, “An Economic Theory of Democracy” (1957) • People vote if (P*B) – C > 0

  5. Good theory, bad prediction • “Predicts” that rational people never vote • Possible “fix” • Focus on different benefits . . . Psychic benefits, “duty” • Turnout not always sensitive to changes in costs • National Voter Registration Act (Motor Voter Act) of 1993) increased registration but not turnout • BUT what about effects of “same day registration”?

  6. 2004 Total Turnout Rates for Voting Eligible Population • Minnesota: 77.21% • Wisconsin: 76.19% • Maine: 73.37%

  7. Possible explanations: Law High Turnout Law Civic Culture High Turnout

  8. Other Camp • Demographic people are able to predict behavior based on characteristics • Education • SES • Race • Age • But, they don’t really explain why people vote (description rather than explanation)

  9. So . . . • One camp is developing explanations that don’t do a good job of describing actual behavior • The other camp is developing descriptions but not bothering to explain the “why” question

  10. Civic Voluntarism Model • Henry Brady, Sidney Verba and Kay Lehman Schlozman • “Voice and Equality”

  11. Civic Voluntarism Model • Interest/Engagement • Mobilization/Recruitment • Resources

  12. Interest/Engagement • interest in politics • political efficacy (“I can make a difference, I can participate effectively”) • sense of civic duty (“It’s my job as an American to participate”) • group consciousness (“As my community goes, so go I”) • party identification • commitment to personal issues

  13. What might affect interest/engagement?

  14. Mobilization/Recruitment • Being asked to participate • What increases chances of recruitment?

  15. Resources • Time • Money • “Civic skills” • Organizational skills • Language skills • Social adeptness • What increases resources?

  16. Note . . . • Some demographic characteristics can cut both ways • Example: having children • May increase interest/engagement • May decrease resources

  17. Implications for Civic Voluntarism Model • “Equal opportunity” not all that equal • Importance of social capital and group membership • Importance of “political entrepreneurs” – politicians and groups that mobilize people • Importance of childhood experiences (family life, education) in adult political behavior

  18. Barriers to ParticipationFormal • Voter Eligibility • Registration laws • Campaign finance laws • Number / quality of polling places

  19. Barriers to ParticipationInformal • Lack of money • Lack of time • Lack of knowledge • Language barriers • Lack of “social capital”

  20. Participation: The Big Picture • 2004: 55% of “Voting Age Population” actually voted (highest since 1968) • 2002: 37% of “Voting Age Population” actually voted • Numbers somewhat misleading • “VAP” includes all adults, even those who are ineligible to vote. • In fact, 63.8% of the CITIZEN population voted in 2004

  21. Turnout • Declining over past 50 years • Why? • Do we care?

  22. Turnout in 2004 - Race

  23. Turnout in 2004 - Gender • Men (citizens): 62.1% • Women (citizens): 65.4%

  24. Turnout in 2004 -- Age

  25. Demographics of Participation • Higher education • Higher SES • Higher age • Cohort Effect?

  26. Big Picture Again • Again, do we care about turnout? • What can we do to fix it?

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