Title: Congressional Elections
1Congressional Elections
- Part 1 Recruitment and funding
2Who becomes a candidate?
- People typically nominate themselves
- Aspirants encounter natl networks of
parties/interests - Recruiting begins 1.5-2 yrs before election
- To recruit new talent and keep incumbents from
retiring - GOPAC founded 1979, to fund candidates at state
level - Gingrich took over in 1980s, goal to win House
majority - Developed/packaged conservative issues through
use of surveys/audiotapes/focus groups/grassroots
mobilization/etc. - GOPAC credited as key catalyst of Republican
Revolution of 1994 (first GOP congress in four
decades and record number of governorships put in
Republican hands). - Widely imitated DLC and Green Party
3November 16, 2003 WASHINGTON, D.C. With hopes
of winning back Congress someday, a new liberal
political action committee has been studying the
war plans of legendary conservative field marshal
Newt Gingrich. PROPAC, as the group is called,
aims to pour 2.6 million over the next year into
recruiting and training left-leaning candidates
at the grass-roots level -- the first step in a
long-range project to fill the pipeline with a
fresh supply of future winners. more
Welcome to GOPAC.org - the website for GOPAC, the
premier training organization for Republican
candidates for elected office. As GOPAC
chairman, I am committed to recruiting and
training outstanding new Republican candidates,
campaign staff, and activists nationwide - and
building a deeper farm team for our party at the
state and local levels. It's my strong belief
that by building a party for all Americans, we
will be a stronger America. Heading into the
2003 - 2004 election cycle, Republicans are
fortunate to have a Republican president in the
White House, and majorities in both houses of
congress - as well as a majority of governors in
the states read more
www.gopac.com
4Political Action Committees (PACS)
- A PAC is an account that gives interest groups a
way to pool the resources of their members to
support candidates for federal office, as opposed
to supporting those candidates directly. PAC
funds separate from groups funds. - Corporations/contractors/labor unions cannot
contribute directly to candidates - Can spend unlimited amounts independently,
without candidates cooperation or consent - PAC can give 5000 to a candidate, 15,000 to
party - Political action committees were authorized by
federal law in the 1970s - Virtually all trade, professional and labor
organizations have now created political action
committees.
5(No Transcript)
6Pacronym Full Name City/State ID
HALPAC Halliburton Company PAC Washington DC C00035691
HALPAC Halter Marine Group Inc. PAC Gulfport MS C00321802
HALPAC Help Americas Leaders PAC Washington DC C00376038
HALPAC Holland America Line Westours Inc. PAC Seattle WA C00287714
HAMPAC Smithfield Foods Inc. PAC Washington DC C00359075
HAPAC Health Alliance of PA PAC (American Hospital Association) Harrisburg PA C00128082
HARLEYPAC Harley-Davidson Inc. PAC Milwaukee WI C00224725
HBCU HBCU/PAC (No sponsoring/connected/affiliated organization) Washington DC C00305839
www.fec.gov
7Incumbent Advantage
- Since WWII, 93 incumbents reelected in House,
80 in Senate - Relatively recent phenomenon. Why?
- House members get 1m a year in perks, Senators 2m
(staff, travel, office, franking, own subway car,
etc.) - 1973 estimate 476m pieces of mail, 38.1m
- The quality of challengers (direction of
causality?)
8Incumbents electorally useful activities
- Advertising
- Brand name. Emphasize experience, knowledge,
responsiveness, concern, sincerity, independence,
- Done largely at public expense (franking
privilege) - Credit Claiming
- Traffic in particularized benefits
- Given to specific group, by congressman
- Given in ad hoc fashion (unlike SS checks), so
apparent congressman had direct hand in it - Position Taking
- Public enunciation of judgmental statement on
anything of interest - Speaker rather than doer position itself is
commodity
9Nominating process
- Candidates for general election usually selected
through partisan primaries (ex. Louisiana) - Closed primaries only voters registered with a
party can vote in its primary - Open primaries voters can vote in either partys
primary (but only one) - Blanket primaries voters can vote in primary for
one candidate for each office, regardless of party
10California Democratic Party et. al. v. Jones
(2000)
- Democrat, Republican, Libertarian and Peace
Freedom parties challenged blanket primary in
court as violating 1st Amendment right to free
association - In no area is the political associations right
to exclude more important than in the process of
selecting its candidates -Scalia - Louisiana employs nonpartisan primary, with
runoff system
11Money
- Average Senate race 3.6m, House race 667,000
- In close House races, winners spent 1.5m on
average - This is not counting independent efforts of
interest groups - More expensive now because less party involvement
- Direct primaries whereas before candidates chosen
by party leaders in a caucus - Volunteers used to mobilize voters, now TV ads,
mail, etc.
12Campaign Finance
- Federal Election Campaign Amendments of 1974
- Limits on individual contributions, group
contributions, reporting requirements - Buckley v. Valeo (1976) ruled that Congress may
not limit expenditures by candidates themselves,
campaign committees, or independent groups - Treated spending as protected free speech
13Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002McConnell
v. Federal Election CommissionUpheld 5-4 on Dec
10, 2003
- Hard Money
- Individuals may contribute 2000 per candidate
per election (primaries and general) totaling
lt37.500. Can give lt57,000 to parties and PACS. - PACS can give 5000 per candidate per election
and 15,000 to a political party. - Soft Money (for party building purposes, not
supporting a specific candidate) - New carpeting, office furniture
- Advertising urging voters to vote for that party
- Under bill, party committees cant accept or
spend soft money
14More on BCRA
- State and local party organizations cant spend
soft money on federal campaigns. May spend it on
voter registration/mobilization - Independent coordinated expenditures FEC must
issue new rules to regulate spending by outside
groups (rules not requiring formal evidence of
coordination w. candidate) - Tax-Exempt groups Natl parties cant solicit
from or contribute to any nonprofit that spends
money on federal elections - Electioneering communications Ads now covered
under campaign finance limits and disclosure
requirements if aired 60 days before general
election or 30 days before primary election.
15Interesting Point
- Court rejected the narrow justification for
campaign finance laws used by opponents of
finance reform that campaign finance
regulations are only justifiable to curtail
corruption that causes a change in legislative
votes. - Court argued soft money leads not only to a
change in legislative votes, but to
manipulations of the legislative calendar,
leading to Congress' failure to enact, among
other things generic drug legislation, tort
reform, and tobacco legislation. - To claim that such legislative scheduling
actions do not change legislative outcomes, says
the court, surely misunderstands the legislative
process.
16Distinction between voting and agenda-setting
- Similar debate concerning whether political
parties actually affect legislative outcomes - No statistical difference between whether
legislators vote according to preferences or out
of party loyalty - Distinction is not between how they vote, but
what they vote on - Court argued that soft money didnt influence
votes in the House, but affected legislative
scheduling, i.e. the type legislation brought to
the floor
17Congress and ElectionsPart II Elections
18Elections as principal-agent problem
- Principal, or individual with authority,
delegates some of that authority to agent to act
on their behalf - Division of labor
- Representative democracy type of delegation
- Problems arise because each agent motivated by
self-interest - Electoral systems can be assessed by their
ability to mitigate these problems
19Types of problems facing voters
- Adverse selection Incomplete information
- Solution Openness and transparency, the media,
political opposition - Moral Hazard Imperfect monitoring
- Solution Same, and possibility of reelection,
suffrage - Problems with current system?
- Low turnout, inaccurate ballots, electoral
college (in Pres. elections), special interest
money
20Turnout
- Turnout extremely low in US, comparatively
- 50 Presidential elections, 30-40 Midterm
- Why?
- Demographic increases in Latinos, young people
- Citizens must initiate registration process
- We must vote more often
- Disaffection
- Rational abstention
- Levels actually exaggerated by VAP inaccuracies
(actual estimate 52.7-60 )
21Riker Ordeshook (1968)
- Turnout explained by cost-benefit analysis
- Return (Benefit X Pivotal) - Cost
- Since pivotal term infinitesimally small,
voting is irrational - Civic duty? (RO later added to equation)
- Aldrich Candidates can share costs by helping
citizens register and get to the polls explains
higher turnout in close races
22The Midterm Effect
- Turnout 10-20 lower in midterm elections, and
Presidents party has lost seats in all but 4
since Civil War. Why? - Surge and Decline (Campbell 1960)
- Coattails vanish in midterm (fewer moderate
voters) - Referendum hypothesis (Tufte 1975)
- Midterm a referendum on Pres. performance, and
approval typically poor at midterm - Part historical accident, partisan macroeconomics
- Not generally accepted
23- Presidential penalty (Erikson 1988)
- Voters more demanding of Presidents party,
inclined to punish - Negative voting (Kernell 1977)
- People more motivated to vote against than for,
and Pres. party most salient - Balancing (Erikson 1988, Alesina Rosenthal
1988) - Voters try to bring policy back to center
- Loss Aversion (Patty 2004)
- Negative turnout
- Turnout ? among those who like current
administration
24Ballots and Ballot Reform
- Currently use the Australian Ballot, which lists
all candidates for any office on each ballot
(1890s) - Replaced partisan ballots, printed by the parties
- Little secrecy in voting, since ballots
distinctive - Intimidation and bribery
- Format prevented split-ticket voting
- Ticket-splitting led to divided control of
government
25Ballots from late 19th Century California
Republican
Taxpayers Union
Prohibition
Union
26Regular Republican
Regular Workingmens
Regular Cactus
Regular Democratic
27Ballot Reform
- Why doesn't everyone in the U.S. vote using the
same technology? - Constitutionally, elections in the United States
are under the jurisdiction of state and local
governments. - Some states moving towards more uniformity in
their voting systems - Georgia implemented same touchscreen voting
system in 2002 throughout the state. - Not likely a single voting system will be used
by all Americans in the near future. - State decides which systems are certified,
local governments pick from list of certified
systems
28Which systems work best?
- Residual vote measure of voting system accuracy
- Ballots cast total - Ballots cast in
particular race - Residual vote captures overvotes and undervotes
- A good measure of accuracy?
- Exit polls show .5-1 voters didnt vote for
president, while residual vote typically 2-2.5 - Massachusetts, Maryland residual lt1
- New Mexico, Illinois, SC residual gt3
- In some counties as high as 20-30
29Different Systems
- Punchcard
- Pre-scored and non-scored
- Most prone to high residual votes (_at_2.5)
- Optical Character Recognition (OCR)
- Centralized optical scanning
- Precinct-based optical scanning (better)
- Direct Recording Electronic (DRE)
- Touchscreen
- Both DRE and Touch. had residual rates of 2.3 in
1998-2000
30Ballot Designs
- Example of Primacy Effect June 2001 Compton
Mayoral runoff - Clerk randomized names in primary, used same
ranking in runoff - Perrodin (listed 1st) beat Bradley (the
incmubent) by 261 votes - On basis of expert testimony, Court threw out
runoff results and reinstated Bradley as mayor - In CA Each election cycle S.O.S issues
randomized alphabet - Stateside, rotation occurs across 80 districts
- Legislative, list utilized for whole district
(unless it cuts across county lines)
31Voting Instructions
- Instructions developed mostly by election
administrators and system vendors - 2001 L.A. mayoral election Got Chad?
- Votomatic punchcard public service announcement
- Residuals decreased dramatically, esp. in
nonwhite precincts - Pictorial images?
32- Lost votes non-technology-related factors, such
as problems with registration and polling place
practices, making voters unable to cast ballots - 4-6m votes estimated lost in 2000
- Provisional voting allows voters whose names are
not on precinct registered voter roster to cast a
ballot - Ballot is sealed in an envelope, and voters
information placed on envelope - Information examined after the election and if
mistake was made, ballot included in final
tabulation - After the 2002 passage of the Help America Vote
Act' all states required to provide provisional
voting
33Congress and Elections Part III Redistricting
- Gerrymander Conscious district line-drawing,
done in order to maximize the number of
legislative seats won by a party or group. - Origin In 1811 Governor Elbridge Gerry of
Massachusetts created a salamander-shaped
district to help Democrats.
34- Techniques
- Packing Lines encompass as many friendly voters
as possible -gt safe districts - Cracking Dilutes partisan strength across
districts to maximize seats won - Types
- Partisan gerrymandering
- Pro-incumbent gerrymandering
- Racial gerrymanderingRacial gerrymandering and
the VRA - Racial Gerrymandering Drawing lines to help
racial/ethnic minorities win legislative seats.
35- Voting Rights Act enacted in 1965
- Prohibited any voting qualifications or
prerequisites - Suspended any test or other device as a
prerequisite - Required 16 states to submit all changes in
electoral laws to the Department of Justice - Authorized appointment of federal registrars if
local registrars continued to discriminate - Amendments to the VRA in 1982 explicitly
encouraged states to create majority-minority
districts (to pack districts in order to elect
minorities)
36- Packing -gt Democratic loss of South in 1990's.
- Paradox of Representation more minority
lawmakers, but a more conservative House.Shaw v
Reno (1993) - After 1990 census, NC created two
majority-minority districts that were
approved by the DOJ. Whites sued. - Court ruled non-minority citizens could sue over
racial gerrymandering if district lines were so
bizarre.
37- Miller v Johnson (1995)
- Court ruled race can't be predominant factor in
drawing a district. - Hunt v Cromartie (1999)
- Court ruled political gerrymandering is OK, even
if most Democrats happen to be black. A district
with a supermajority of blacks not evidence
enough to prove race was main motivation.