Title: The Election Process
1The Election Process
2Running for President
- The formal campaign has 3 stages
- The Nomination
- The Convention
- The General Election
3How to get on the Ballot
- Primary or Caucus
- Major Parties
- Petition
- Independents and third parties
4The Nomination
- Nomination by Petition
- -It is possible to get on the ballots without a
party backing you. - As few as 200 signatures to get on the ballot.
- As much as 3 of registered voters
- In Washington State, that meant 72,784 voters.
5- MAJOR NOMINATION
- When running for President, you must first win
the nomination of your party before you can get
on the ballot. - The decision of when to start campaigning varies.
Early decisions are increasingly necessary.
6To Get a Major Nomination
- Primary Campaign
- Build a personal organization - Networking,
serving in civic causes and on committees,
helping other candidates. - Hire Managers - buy TV ads, conduct polls, raise
money. - Visibility is 1- Mentioned in the media, public
appearances, hand shaking and door-to-door
campaigning.
7The Nomination
- Primaries- elections within the party to choose
favorite candidate from that party. - Open primary- any registered voter can vote
Texas has an open primary system (it doesnt
matter what party you belong to) - Closed primary- only declared party members can
vote - it discourages raiding. - Wide open primary-no parties are listed on the
ballot.
8The Nomination
- Caucuses- Town Hall meeting format. Candidates
and issues are discussed and voted on in private
until the group determines an individual nominee
at that time it is announced publicly.
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11The Nomination
- Voters in Iowa (caucus) and New Hampshire
(primary) bask in media attention because they
cast their ballots first this has the effect of
limiting choices of other voters in states who
hold their primaries later in the process.
12Against the Primary System
- ? Disproportionate attention goes to the early
caucuses and primaries - Rural, low minority numbers, more liberal
- ? Causes disunity competition within the party
- ? Time Required
- ? Money plays a gigantic role - early quitters
were unable to raise money quick enough. - ? Participation is low and unrepresentative
- 50 in November, 20 in primaries, 5 in caucus
- ? Too much power given to the media
- Influence who has the momentum at any given
moment - The press labels candidates winners and losers.
13In Favor of the Primaries
- Opens the nominating process to more voters than
do the caucus or convention methods. - Opportunity to judge candidates abilities to
- Organize a campaign,
- Communicate through the media,
- Stand up against pressure,
- Public speaking and crisis control
- Appeal to the needs of different regions and
groups
14The Nomination
- How do they determine who wins the primaries?
- Winner-Takes-All the candidate with the most
votes wins. The winner doesnt necessarily need
a majority. - In a multi-candidate race, the winner may have
only a plurality, (simply more than the other
candidates. - In Texas, and ONLY IN PRIMARIES, we have a
run-off election when no candidate gets a clear
majority. - (two top vote getters run against each other to
find the majority winner)!
15Party Unification
- Primaries tend to be a fierce political battle
between opponents from the same party. - To bring about party unity, losers from the
primary speak during the convention, putting
their support to the winning candidate.
16Party Unity
Reunification after the Primaries
17Stage 2 THE CONVENTION
18REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION
19THE CONVENTION
- National Party Conventions
- State Delegates
- Commitment to a specific
candidate? - Network TV coverage
- Reduced in recent years due to lack of public
interest. - Day 1 Keynote address other speeches
- Day 2
20Clinton in 88
Obama in 04
21The Convention
- Day 23 Committee reports/rules and the party
platform. - The Platform is made up of planks (issues) put
together that spell out where the party stands on
the issues.
22What are the issues?
- Abortion
- Legalizing marijuana
- Gun Control
- Health Care
- Economy
- Foreign Affairs
23The Convention
- Day 4
- Choosing the running mate
- Accepting the nomination
- The Vice Presidential Nominee
- The choice is made before the convention,
- The announcement is timed to enhance the media.
- Sarah Palin, McCains choice in 08 was made to
energize the McCain campaign (Did it?)
24The Convention
- The Candidate
- Balances the ticket
- Mondale picked the 1st woman in 1984, Geraldine
Ferraro -they did not win. - Bush Sr. did poorly with women and baby boomer
voters, so he picked Quayle. - Bill Clinton and Al Gore do not represent a
balanced ticket.
25Stage 3 THE GENERAL ELECTION
- Most voters vote on the basis of party and
candidate appeal. - The Media and Image - Candidates devote a ton of
attention to defining themselves positively and
the opposition negatively. The media plays a big
role in allowing this to happen.
26Presidential Debates- TV debates are now a major
feature of the elections. The 1960 debate of
Nixon and JFK was famous because it elevated the
role of TV in our politics.
27- The debates of 1992 generated a large viewing
audience. - This debate did not change peoples minds though.
- Most debates usually just reinforce peoples
attitudes.
28The General Election
- The Electoral College
- Each state is free to determine how its electors
are selected and are usually long time party
workers. - They are expected to vote for their partys
candidate. - Each state gets an electoral number based on
number of representatives and senators your state
gets. - Texas has 32 representatives and 2 Senators, thus
34 electors.
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30- Bush Lead in 2000 Gore lead in 2000
- These were the toss-up states in 2000
31The General Election
- The Electoral College
- The candidate, who wins a plurality of the
popular vote, gets all electoral votes of that
state. - The winning electors go their state capital on
the first Monday after the second Wednesday in
December to cast their vote. - The ballots are sent to Congress early in January
and Congress formally counts the ballots and
declares the winner. - If no candidate gets the 270 needed, the House
chooses the President and the Senate chooses the
VP
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vok_VQ8I7g6I
32Election 2004Blue States-DemocratRed-Republican
33The General Election
- Most electoral rules remain matters of state law
- but every 2 years there is a Congressional
election, every 4 years, a Presidential election. - Elections for members of Congress and the
President occur the first Tuesday after the first
Monday in November on even numbered years. (in
the Constitution)
34Pop Quiz!!!
- Get out a blank sheet of paper
- (you can use your notes)
- Dont forget there is a TEST next class!!!