1 / 18

What role do elections and campaigns have within American society?

What role do elections and campaigns have within American society?. LESSON 6 Elections and Campaigns. How is the electoral process set by our written laws?. LAWS & THE ELECTORAL PROCESS Scheduling Elections Scheduled far in advance according to federal or state rules

zeal
Download Presentation

What role do elections and campaigns have within American society?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What role do elections and campaigns have within American society? LESSON 6 Elections and Campaigns

  2. How is the electoral process set by our written laws? • LAWS & THE ELECTORAL PROCESS • Scheduling Elections • Scheduled far in advance according to federal or state rules • Held at scheduled times regardless of current events (ex: 9/11, WWII)

  3. How is the electoral process set by our written laws? • Polling Places and Ballots • PRECINCTS: Basic geographical units in which elections are conducted  size restricted by state laws • ELECTION BOARDS: Regulate specific polling places and voting process • AUSTRALIAN BALLOT:Uniform secret ballot that lists all candidates and given to voters at polls • More than halfof American voters use mechanical voting process

  4. How many different types of elections do we have? • TYPES OF ELECTIONS • Primaries • DIRECT PRIMARIES:Elections where all party members may vote to choose candidate for general election • CLOSED PRIMARY: Only registered party members may participate • OPEN PRIMARY: Nominating election where any qualified voter may participate

  5. How many different types of elections do we have? • BLANKET PRIMARY–All voters receive same ballot with candidates from all parties • RUNOFF PRIMARY– Required if no candidate wins majority (usually limited to top two candidates)

  6. How many different types of elections do we have? • Caucuses • CAUCUS: Meeting of party leaders to select candidates • Less democratic • Used less frequently • More important during presidential elections greater historical significance (Iowa) Hand count during Iowa Caucus (2004)

  7. How many different types of elections do we have? • General election • When party nominees face each other • Frequency of general elections varies based on level of government FREQUENCY OF GENERAL ELECTIONS FEDERAL LEVEL: Always first Tuesday after first Monday in November (Election Day – Nov. 6) STATE LEVEL (NY): Follows federal structure; primaries in September COUNTY LEVEL (Nassau): Follows federal structure; primaries in September

  8. What decisions are made in selecting our President? • PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGNS • MAKING THE DECISION TO RUN:Candidates assess the price and the odds for winning • Make a public announcement • Make a strategy

  9. What decisions are made in selecting our President? • WINNING DELEGATES: The goal is to win support from many delegates at nominating convention • FIRST STEP:Strong showing in early primaries(NH, Iowa) • SECOND STEP:Use momentum for publicity, support and money

  10. What decisions are made in selecting our President? • THE CONVENTION • A “pep rally” for candidate surviving primary season  kickoff of final campaign • Settlement of party platform • DARK HORSE CANDIDATE:One who receives unexpected support to challenge frontrunner

  11. What decisions are made in selecting our President? • GENERAL ELECTION STAGE • Focus of campaign shifts to appealing to allvoters • Increase in campaign staff for final push • MEDIA & ADVERTISING • POLLING • SPEECHWRITING • FUNDRAISING

  12. What decisions are made in selecting our President? • TELEVISED DEBATES:Give public opportunity to hear different viewpoints

  13. TIMELINERunning for the Presidency ELECTION November PRIMARIES & CAUCUSES Run from February to June CONVENTIONS Just before Labor Day 24 MONTHS BEFORE ELECTION 12 MONTHS BEFORE ELECTION PARTY CONVENTIONS Formal selection of nominees • THE DECISION TO RUN • Gather support and money • Test the waters • Announce candidacy WINNING DELEGATES Elimination of all candidates except one • GENERAL ELECTION STAGE • General campaign • Population votes

  14. How can a presidential election affect other national races? • CONGRESSIONAL CAMPAIGNS • Less expensive • Less competitive • President’s popularity may affect both House and Senate races  coattail effect Peter King (R) Representative 2nd CD

  15. CAMPAIGN SPENDING - 2012 Barack Obama (D)$683,546,548/ 65,899,660 =$10.37 per vote Mitt Romney (R)$433,281,516/ 60,932,152 = $7.11 Gary Johnson (L)$2,507,763 / 1,275,827 = $1.97 Where do they find the money to pay for these elections? • CAMPAIGN FINANCING • FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION (FEC): Requires candidates and parties to make public records of contributions and spending • Cost of campaigns has increased dramatically  most money spent on media (TV, radio) • WAR CHEST ADVANTAGE: Incumbents scare away competition with large campaign funds

  16. Where do they find the money to pay for these elections? • SOURCES OF CAMPAIGN FUNDS • PRIVATE SOURCES • Candidate’s personal wealth • Individual contributions • Regulated by federal and state governments • Mostly modest amounts ($100-$200) • Corporate dollars • POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEES (PACs):Political arm of special interest group that contribute to campaigns buying influence?

  17. Where do they find the money to pay for these elections? • PUBLIC SOURCE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT • MATCHING FUNDS:Government will match contributions of individual donors • No more than $250 each • Limits spending to what each candidate is given

  18. Where do they find the money to pay for these elections? • Loopholes and concerns over campaign finance • Abuse of campaign finance laws consistently debated • Three major concerns of public • SOFT MONEY:Money not regulated by federal law that is used for general expenses  not spent on specific candidates, but spent on promoting issues • FUNDRAISING TACTICS:Should elected officials use government offices to solicit funds? (ex: Clinton/Gore, 1996) • SKYROCKETING COSTS:Presidential campaigns can be more expensive than corporate advertising budgets

More Related