1 / 39

Elections & Campaigns

Elections & Campaigns. Road to the Presidency. Road to the Presidency. Campaigns can be very simple or very complex. Road to the Presidency. If you run for the local school board , you may just: File your name Answer a few questions from the local newspaper

ziven
Download Presentation

Elections & Campaigns

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. Elections & Campaigns Road to the Presidency

  2. Road to the Presidency • Campaigns can be very simple or very complex

  3. Road to the Presidency • If you run for the localschool board, you may just: • File your name • Answer a few questions from the local newspaper • Sit back & wait for the election

  4. Road to the Presidency • If you run for president, that’s another story . . .

  5. Road to the Presidency • Today it is almost impossible to run a campaign for the presidency in less than two years

  6. Road to the Presidency • How much money does it take? • Open question. . .but it involves millions of dollars

  7. Step 1: Deciding to announce • Presidential hopefuls must first assess their political & financial support for a campaign

  8. Step 1: Deciding to announce • They generally start campaigning well before any actual declaration of candidacy

  9. Step 1: Deciding to announce • They may be approached by party leaders, or they may float the idea themselves

  10. Step 1: Deciding to announce • Many hopefuls come from Congress or a governorship

  11. Step 1: Deciding to announce • They never announce for the presidency before they feel they have support for a campaign

  12. Step 1: Deciding to announce • Usually the hopeful makes it known to the press that he or she will be holding an important press conference on a certain day at a certain time

  13. Step 1: Deciding to announce • Announcement serves as the formal beginning to the campaign

  14. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Candidates for a party’s presidential nominees run in a series of presidential primaries, in which they register

  15. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • By tradition, the first primary is held in February of the election year in New Hampshire

  16. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • States hold individual primaries through June on dates determined ahead of time

  17. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Technically, the states are choosing convention delegates • But. . most delegates abide by the decision of the voters

  18. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Candidates who win early primaries tend to pick up support along the way

  19. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Those candidates that lose generally find it difficult to raise money & are forced to drop out of the race

  20. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Tendency for early primaries to be more important than later ones is called frontloading

  21. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • By the time primaries are over, each party’s candidate is almost certainly finalized

  22. Step 3: The Conventions • First party convention was held during the presidency of AndrewJackson by the Democratic Party

  23. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • It was invented as a “grassroots” replacement to the old party caucus: • Party leaders met together in “smoke-filled rooms” to determine the candidate

  24. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Today, national party conventions are held in late summer before the general election in November

  25. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Before primaries began to be instituted state by state in the early part of this 20th century, the conventions actually selected the party candidates

  26. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Today, the primaries determine the candidate • But. . the convention formally nominates them

  27. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Each party determines its method for selecting delegates

  28. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • Even though the real decision is made before the conventions begin they are still important for. . .

  29. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • (1) stating party platforms • (2) showing party unity • (3) highlighting the candidates with vice-presidential & presidential candidates’ speeches on the last night of the convention

  30. Step 2: Presidential Primaries • In short, the convention serves as a pep rally for the party • Attempts to put best foot forward to the voters who watch the celebrations on TV

  31. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • After the conventions are over, the two candidates then face one another

  32. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • The time between the end of the last convention & Labor Day used to be seen as a time of rest. .

  33. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • In recent elections, candidates often go right to the general campaign

  34. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • Most of the campaign money is spent in the general campaign • Media & election experts are widely used during this time

  35. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • Because each party wants to win, the candidates usually begin sounding more middle-of-the-road than they did in the primaries—when they were appealing to party loyalists

  36. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • Since 1960 presidential debates are often a major feature of presidential elections

  37. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • Debates give candidates free TV time to influence votes in their favor

  38. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • In recent campaigns, the use of electronic media has become more important

  39. Step 4: Campaigning for the General Election • Skyrocketing cost of campaigns has also had an effect on campaigns

More Related