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Political Parties, Candidates, and Campaigns Chapter 8

Political Parties, Candidates, and Campaigns Chapter 8. AP U.S. Government and Politics. Introduction. A political party is an ongoing coalition of interests joined together to try to get its candidates for public office elected under a common label.

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Political Parties, Candidates, and Campaigns Chapter 8

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  1. Political Parties, Candidates, and CampaignsChapter 8 AP U.S. Government and Politics

  2. Introduction • A political party is an ongoing coalition of interests joined together to try to get its candidates for public office elected under a common label. • U.S. campaigns are both party-centered and candidate-centered. • Party-centered - the Republican and Democratic parties compete across the country election after election. • Candidate-centered - individual candidates devise their own strategies, choose their own issues, and form their own campaign organizations.

  3. The History of U.S. Parties • Parties are linkage institutions; they serve to connect citizens with government. • Party Competition develops when Americans vote. • Voters choose between candidates who represent the Republican and Democratic parties. • Voter’s opinions are narrowed – they vote and the party that wins gets to govern. • Many of America’s early leaders distrusted parties. • Washington warned of the “baneful effects” of parties in his farewell address. • Madison – likened parties to special interests – Federalist #10

  4. The First Parties • The first political parties originated from a rivalry between Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton. • Hamilton organized the Federalist Party. • Jefferson created the Democratic-Republican Party. • After Jefferson won the 1800 election, no Federalist would again control the white house. • In the 1820s, it appeared that the political system may operate without parties. • “The Era of Good Feeling” • Policy differences split the Democratic-Republicans. • The dominant faction, led by Andrew Jackson, became known as the “Democrats”.

  5. Andrew Jackson and Grassroots Parties • Jackson’s goal – wrest political power from elites. • Jackson created a grassroots party, a party organized at the level of the voters, which depends on voter support. • Voting rights were extended to those without property, causing many more people to vote. • During this time the Whig Party was created by opponents of Jackson and the Democrats. • It was short lived, as the issue of slavery tore the party apart. • As the Whigs disintegrated, a northern-based party called the Republican Party emerged. • In 1860, Republican nominee Abraham Lincoln won with just 40% of popular vote, causing Southern states to secede. • Civil War – only time in U.S. history where Two-Party system failed to peacefully solve American’s political differences.

  6. Republicans and Democrats – The Two-Party System • Since the Civil War, America has settled into a pattern of competition the Republican and Democratic parties. • They have been able to respond to crucial times through reorganization through change. • Party Realignment occurs when dramatic shifts in partisan preference drastically alter the political landscape. • Preceding party realignment is one or more critical elections, also known as realigning elections. • A critical election is an election that signals a party realignment through voter polarization around new issues and personalities.

  7. The Two-Party System, cont. • Realignments are rare. • Civil War realignment, 1896 election, Great Depression (1930s) • Today, the Republican Party dominates politics in the South. • Northeastern and Western States are increasingly Democratic. • Since the 1970s, divided government has become common. • In a divided government, different political parties control the presidency and one or both houses of Congress.

  8. Electoral and Party Systems • U.S. history has been dominated by a two-party system. • Most democracies have a multiparty system, in which three or more parties have the capacity to control government. • America’s two-party system is the result of voting in single-member districts. (House of Representatives) • The candidate with the most votes in a district wins the office – winner-take-all system. • The Electoral College works this way as well – in most cases, whoever wins a state’s popular vote gains all of that state’s electoral votes. • Discourages minor parties. • Different from Europe, where proportional representation is used to allocate seats according to a party’s share of the popular vote.

  9. Politics in the Two-Party System • The main goal of a political party is to get its candidates elected to office. • To do this, they try to attract majority support by staying near the center of the political spectrum. • Median Voter Theorem states that parties can maximize their vote by winning voters in the middle. • The Party Coalition refers to the groups and interests that support a political party. • The gender gap represents the difference between men and women in political attitude and voting preference. • Women – more likely to have liberal views and be Democrats. • Hispanic vote is a major key to both parties; currently more Democrats than Republicans.

  10. Minor (Third) Parties • The U.S. has always had minor political parties. • They form to promote policies their followers do not believe are being represented adequately by the two major parties. Types of Minor Parties • Reform parties – Claim that the two major parties are having a corrupting influence on government. • Progressive Party, Reform Party (Ross Perot) • Single-issue parties – Formed around a single issue of overriding interest to its followers. • Free-soil Party, Prohibition Party, Right to Life Party

  11. Types of Minor Parties • Ideological parties – characterized by ideological commitment to a broad philosophical position. • Socialist Workers Party, Libertarian Party • Factional Parties – minor parties created when a faction within one party breaks away to form its own party. • Bull Moose Party (Roosevelt), States’ Rights Party

  12. What are the functions of a political party? • Get their candidates elected. • Recruit candidates for office. • Organize and run campaigns. • Organize voter registration drives, recruit volunteers, work to increase participation. • Present alternative policies for operating the government. • Provide a political identity. • Each party has an image – gives the public a familiar platform. • Endorsing specific policies. • Coordinating policymaking. • Through party identification, politicians in different government branches work together and support each other.

  13. What are the functions of a political party? • Accepting responsibility for operation of government. • Staffing executive branch with party supporters, developing linkages among officials to implement their policies. • Act as organized opposition to the party in power. • By organizing opposition to the “in” party, the opposition party forces debate on policy alternatives.

  14. The Weakening of Parties • Many political scientists feel political parties are getting weaker. • Candidates, not parties, have the most influence in politics. • More people identify themselves as independents. • More campaigns are candidate-centered as opposed to party centered. • Increase in split-ticket voting. • Parties are more “open.” • Direct primary elections replaced parties nominating candidates for office. • Candidates now compete for public support, not necessarily the support of their party leaders.

  15. The Weakening of Parties, cont. • Candidates now directly get most money. • It doesn’t pass through party leaders. • Decline of patronage jobs also weakened parties. • Government jobs are given to people loyal to a particular candidate, not an entire party. • Dealignment – General decline in party identification and party loyalty in the electorate. • Despite losing influence, party organizations are in no danger of going extinct.

  16. The Structure and Role of Party Organizations • Structurally, U.S. parties are loose associations of national, state, and local organizations.

  17. Local Party Organizations • Parties are organized from the bottom up, not top down. • 95 % of party activists work at the local level. • Local parties concentrate on local elections. • They also take secondary roles in state and national elections. State Party Organizations • At the state level, each party is headed by a central committee. • Made up of members of local party organizations and local and state officeholders. • Day-to-day operations are carried out by a chairperson. • Concentrate on statewide races – governor and U.S. Senator, and state legislatures.

  18. National Party Organizations • National party organizations are structured in a similar way as those at the state level. • Their power is largely confined to setting organizational policy and determining the site of the presidential nominating convention.

  19. Campaigns • Campaigns have two major parts – the nomination campaign and the general election campaign. • The nomination campaign is aimed at winning a primary election. • The candidate is the center of the campaign, but there is a large campaign staff, made of political consultants. • The campaign manager travels with the candidate and coordinates the campaign. • The finance chair coordinated the financial business of the campaign. • The communications director develops the media strategy for the candidate.

  20. Volunteers are also very important to campaigns at the local, state, and national level.

  21. Campaign Finance • Major role of Party Organizations in campaigns – raise and spend money. • The U.S. has tried to find ways to regulate campaign finance. • In 1971, Congress passed the Federal Election Campaign Act, requiring disclosure of campaign finance. • Congress later amended the FECA to include additional ways to regulate spending, including the creation of the Federal Election Commission (FEC) and limiting campaign contributions. • Buckley v. Valeo(1976) struck down various FECA limits on spending as unconstitutional violations of free speech.

  22. Most money raised is spent on recruiting voters and advertising. • Some money is given directly to Senate or House candidates for their campaigns. • This money, along with the money a candidate receives from individual contributors or interest groups is called hard money. • Hard money is subject to strict limits. • Soft Money – campaign contributions that are not subject to legal limits because they were given to parties, not individual candidates. • Soft money contributions are no longer legal as a result of the enactment of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA), also known as McCain-Feingold.

  23. Ban on soft money does not apply to “527 groups”, which are non-profit political groups. • “527 groups” now are allowed to run ads on issue advocacy, but can’t attack a specific candidate. • Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010) – Supreme Court ruled that corporations and unions can’t be banned from spending money on campaigns. • It was ruled that they have the same 1st Amendment rights as individuals and spending money was considered a method of speech.

  24. Sources of Campaign Funding • Candidates get campaign money in many different ways. • Individuals can donate money to candidates ($2,500 per candidate per election). • Political parties give donations to candidates ($5,000 per House candidate; $43,100 per Senate candidate). • Personal Savings are not regulated. • Political Action Committees (PACs) are officially recognized fund-raising organizations that represent interest groups and are allowed by law to make direct contributions to campaigns. • 527 Committees • 501(c) Groups – interest groups whose primary purpose is not electoral politics.

  25. Super PACs – political action committees established to make independent expenditures. • Unlike traditional PACs, they cant give money directly to candidates or party committees. • They are not subject to expenditure limits. • They spent over $600,000,000 on the 2012 Presidential Election. • Public funds – donations from tax revenues are also given to qualifying candidates if they apply for matching funds.

  26. Candidate-Centered Campaigns • Party committees have a service relationship with candidates. • They assist candidates, but have no power to require them to support positions. • Today’s campaigns are controlled by the candidates. • Campaign costs continue to rise. • Incumbents have an advantage in fundraising. • Since campaigns are so expensive, the money chase is relentless. • Political Consultants are key operatives in today’s campaigns. • They are private sector professionals who advise candidates on aspects of their campaigns.

  27. Political consultants are skilled at packaging candidates. • Packaging refers to the process of recasting the candidate’s record into an appealing image. Reaching Voters • Campaigns use a variety of methods to try to influence voters. • Air wars – the main battleground of the modern campaign, mainly through the use of TV ads.

  28. Campaign advertisements take a number of forms. • Positive adsstress a candidate’s qualifications, family, and issue positions without directly referencing the opponent. • Negative adsattack the opponent’s character or platform. • Contrast adscompare the record and proposals of the candidates, with a bias toward the candidate sponsoring the ad. • Inoculation ads attempts to counteract an anticipated ad before the attack is launched. • Ground wars concentrate on getting swing voters to the polls. • “Get-out-the-vote” efforts

  29. Web wars are conducted using the internet to provide information, generate support, recruit volunteers, and raise money. • Many experts feel that internet advertising will overtake TV as the main medium of political campaigns. • Advertising is cheaper on the internet. Public Influence on Parties and Candidates • Candidate-centered campaigns have some distinct advantages. • They infuse new blood into politics. • They lend flexibility to electoral politics. • When issues change, self-directed candidates adjust quickly. • They encourage national officeholders to be responsive to local interests.

  30. Candidate-centered campaigns also have disadvantages. • They become fertile ground for interest groups. • They give large sums of money, allowing them to influence the election’s outcome. • They weaken accountability by making it easier for officeholders to deny responsibility for government action. • Candidate-centered campaigns strengthen the relationship between voters and candidates while weakening the relationship between the electorate and their representative institutions (parties).

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