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SUFFRAGE, VOTING TURNOUT, AND PARTY SYSTEMS

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Title: SUFFRAGE, VOTING TURNOUT, AND PARTY SYSTEMS


1
SUFFRAGE, VOTING TURNOUT, AND PARTY SYSTEMS
  • Topic 35

2
Suffrage and Voting Turnout
  • Suffrage under the early Constitution
  • was determined entirely by state laws
  • which varied greatly from state to state.
  • Moreover, voting turnout among eligible voters
    apparently was quite low.
  • During the Jacksonian revolution (1825-1840)
  • the right to vote was extended to almost all
    adult white males and
  • party organizations waged energetic election
    campaigns,
  • which greatly increased voting turnout.
  • 15th Amendment (1870) no abridgement of the
    right to vote on account of race, color, or
    previous condition of servitude.
  • Jim Crow system in the South (1890-1965)
  • Many African-Americans were effectively
    disenfranchised.

3
Suffrage and Voting Turnout
  • Australian ballot and voter registration systems
    (1880-1900)
  • guaranteed secret ballot
  • reduce voter fraud but also
  • reduced (suppressed?) voting turnout (?).
  • 19th Amendment (1920) no abridgement on account
    of sex.
  • 24th Amendment (1964) no abridgement by reason
    of failure to pay any poll or other tax.
  • Voting Rights Act (1965)
  • 26th Amendment (1971) no abridgement on account
    of age 18 or older.
  • The 19th and 26th amendments increased the size
    of the electorate but (initially) reduced voting
    turnout among eligible voters.

4
(No Transcript)
5
Voting Turnout
  •                      actual vote       
    recorded Presidential vote
  • Voting turnout                       
  •                            potential vote    
         voting age population
  • voting age population vs. eligible voters vs.
    registered voters
  • Motor Voter law (KJ, p. 401)
  • vote fraud/suppression
  • felon disqualification

6
Political Parties
  • Negative popular vs. positive political science
    evalu-ations of political parties.
  • Elite vs. mass view of political parties
  • lessons of Presidential selection
  • nominating function
  • Party competition the democratic method is that
    institutional arrangement for arriving at
    political decisions in which individual acquire
    the power to decide by means of a competitive
    struggle for the peoples vote. (Joseph
    Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy,
    1942)
  • The market model of democracy (Anthony Downs, An
    Economic Theory of Democracy, 1957)
  • The jury model of democracy
  • Party competition as a check on special
    interests and unrepresentative activists

7
Two-Party vs. Multiparty Systems
  • Different types of party systems result from
    different types of electoral institutions
    (Duvergers Law)
  • Single-winner elections (SMDs and separate
    executives plurality voting) gt two-party
    systems.
  • Typical in English-speaking countries.
  • Multiple-winner elections (MMDs proportional
    representation, and no separate executives) gt
    multiparty systems
  • Typical in most other countries

8
Two-Party vs. Multiparty Systems (cont.)
  • Different party behavior as a consequence
  • Two-party systems
  • catch-all parties
  • relatively closely balanced elections
  • relative party convergence and
  • regular alternation in power.
  • Multiparty systems
  • historically more differentiated parties
  • parties of greatly unequal size
  • party divergence and
  • (sometimes) a hardly changing centrist governing
    coalition.

9
Weaknesses of American Political Parties
  • Decentralized constitutional structure
  • separation of powers
  • federalism
  • Absence of strict party discipline in Congress,
  • due to separation of powers.
  • Liberal and individualistic political culture
  • social pluralism
  • "catch-all" parties
  • Absence of mass parties with formal dues-paying
    membership.
  • The direct primary (introduced around 1900)
  • deprives parties of their fundamental nominating
    function.
  • Historically unique but increasingly copied in
    other countries.
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