Title: Presidential and Congressional Elections
1Presidential and Congressional Elections
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2Voter Turnout
- U.S. turnout in comparative perspective
- Lower for congressional elections than
Presidential elections - Decline in voter turnout
- How low is it? Does it matter?
- The role of age and education
3Turnout in Comparative Perspective
See also Fiorina et al. Table 6.1, p.140
4Trends in Voter Turnout
5Voting is the most common form of political
participation
- Many people also talk about politics and try to
persuade others to vote - Very few participate in any other specific way.
6The U.S. in Comparative Perspective
Source Comparative Study of Electoral Systems
(CSES), Module 2, 2004
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8Why is voter turnout so low?
- Electoral system
- Voter attitudes
- Lack of convenience
- Difficulty of registration
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10Options for Electing the President
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- Congress chooses the president
- State legislatures choose the president
- President elected by popular vote
- Electoral College
11How it works
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- Each state was allocated a number of Electors
equal to the number of U.S. Senators (always 2)
plus the number of U.S. Representatives (which
changes) - The manner of choosing the electors was left to
the individual state legislators. By 1836 all
states (except for South Carolina) choose
electors by popular vote (plurality rules). - The person with a majority of electoral votes is
elected president - In the event that no candidate wins a majority,
the U.S. House of Representatives would choose
from the top five contenders. Each state could
cast only one vote. An absolute majority is
required
122000 Presidential Election
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Bush 271 Gore 266 (270 needed to win)
13Battleground States (2004)
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Bush 234 Kerry 207
142004 Presidential Election Results
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See results by state
Bush 286 EV (51)/ Kerry 252 EV (48) 270 EV
needed to win
A change in Ohio (with 20 electoral votes) would
have given Kerry the presidency even though Bush
would have received a majority of the popular vote
15Unequal Representation
Source Robert A. Dahl, How Democratic is the
American Constitution?
16Adjusting for State Population
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17Plurality Winners by County
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18Percentage of the vote for parties
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19The Florida Disaster
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- Florida recount (link to Univ. of Chicago study)
- The punch card voting system
- Design of the palm beach ballot
20The Butterfly Ballot
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21Evidence of problems in Palm Beach
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222006 Midterm Elections
- Democrats win control of both the House and the
Senate for the first time since 1994 - Democrats picked up 28 Seats in House (229 D/196
R) - Democrats picked up 6 Seats in the Senate (51 D
including 2 Independents/49 R)
23Forecast in Democratic Seats
24Forecast in Republican Seats
25Midterm Losses
- Presidents party has lost House seats in every
postwar midterm election until 1998 and 2002. - Since the end of WW II, the average midterm seat
loss for the presidents party is 24 seats. - When the presidents approval rating is below 50
the average midterm seat loss is 38 seats.
26Presidential Popularity and Congressional
Outcomes in the Midterm Elections in a
Presidents Second Term
Year President Approval House Senate
1950 Truman 41 -29 -6
1958 Eisenhower 57 -48 -13
1966 Johnson 44 -47 -4
1974 Nixon/Ford 53 -48 -5
1986 Reagan 64 -5 -8
1998 Clinton 65 5 0
2006 Bush 38 -28 -6