Title: Representation
1Representation
2The Tracking Polls as of November 3
- Obama 51, McCain 44 (DemCorps 10/3011/2)
- Obama 51, McCain 43 (NBCWSJ 11/1-2)
- Obama 52, McCain 42 (Gallup 10/31-11/2)
- Obama 54, McCain 41 (CBS 10/30-11/1)
- Obama 54, McCain 43 (ABCPost 10/29-11/1)
3Link to CNN map
4(No Transcript)
5An Historic Election
- Obama 53 365 EV McCain 46 162 EV
- Obama carries the battleground states of Ohio,
Florida, and Pennsylvania - Obama also wins Virginia, North Carolina, and
Indiana - Obama wins south western states, Colorado, NM, NV
- Obama also picked up one electoral vote in
Nebraska by winning in Omaha congressional
district marking the first time a state has split
its electoral votes. - See NY Times map for shift in vote patterns. See
also the National Journal website. - Who voted for Obama? Exit Polls
- Turnout may have risen but only slightly one
political scientist estimates a turnout of 61.4
of eligible voters which represents a 1.3
increase over 2004. It would be the largest
turnout since the 62.5 percent turnout in 1968.
6Was it a Landslide?
Year Republican Democrat Difference
1976 47.9 50.1 2.2
1980 50.9 41.2 -9.7
1984 59 41 -18
1988 53.4 45.6 -7.8
1992 43.2 37.7 -5.5
1996 49 41 -8
2000 48 48 0
2004 50.7 48.3 -2.4
2008 46 53 7
7Incumbency Advantage
- Typically about 90 percent of House incumbents
are reelected - In the Senate, 78.6 percent have won reelection
in the postwar period - Even in years very unfavourable to one of the
parties, a large majority win. In 1994, the
Democrats worst year since 1946, 84 percent won.
In 1974, 77 percent of the Republican incumbents
who ran were returned to office. - In 2006, 94 percent of House incumbents won in
the Senate 79 percent were reelected.
8The 2008 Election
- Democrats picked up 20 seats in the House
- Democrats gained 6 seats, defeating Republican
incumbents in North Carolina, New Hampshire, and
Oregon. See NYTimes map. - Alaska and Minnesota are still too close to call
(206 vote Rep. lead in Minn), and Georgia will
hold a runoff on Dec 2 (majority required) - Several congressional districts still in doubt
Alaska, Virginia, Ohio (open seat). See NYTimes
map.
9Presidential 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
10Explanations for Incumbency Advantage
- Name Recognition
- Redistricting (in the House)
- Campaign finance system
11Elbridge Gerrys Salamander
12Gerrymandering
- Equal populations
- Partisan
- Incumbency
- Racial
13Racial Gerrmandering
0
14Campaign Spending
0
15Campaign Money
- A good candidate and a good message are not
enough. Without money, the voters do not see the
candidate or hear the message. - In contemporary candidate-centered campaigns,
candidates (as opposed to the party
organizations) must assemble their own campaign
teams, raise their own money, hire consultants
and technical specialists, and design and execute
their own individual campaign strategies. - Recent elections reflect the rise in cost.
16Money Raised in 2008
Source www opensecrets.org
17Ethics and Honesty
18Attitudes about Campaign Finance
19The Campaign Finance Regulation System
- Campaign finance operates through two parallel
systems - Money going directly to candidates is subject to
limits on the size of contributions and full
disclosure of sources. See Federal Election
Commission. - Presidential candidates who accept public funds
also must observe spending limits. But money
raised and spent outside of the candidates
campaigns (soft money, issue advocacy) is lightly
regulated and not subject to limits.
20The Role of the Representative
- Trusteeslegislators who use their own judgment
to decide what is right - Delegates-legislators who carry out the precise
wishes of their constituents back home regardless
of what they personally believe is best - Descriptive-does congress look like America?
21African American and Hispanics in Congress
22Women in Congress
23Policy Representation