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Suffrage and Turnout POLS 4349 Dr. Brian William Smith.

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Presentation on theme: "Suffrage and Turnout POLS 4349 Dr. Brian William Smith."— Presentation transcript:

1 Suffrage and Turnout POLS 4349 Dr. Brian William Smith

2 Office Hours When – Today 11-12 – Weds 10-2 – And by appointment Doyle 226B

3 Learning Outcomes I Evaluate how people develop political opinions and how this impacts their political behavior. Evaluate and interpret the importance of partisanship in shaping political opinion and vote choice Identify and describe the formal and informal institutions involved in the electoral process

4 Readings Chapter 2: Suffrage and Turnout (Flanigan) Downs, Anthony. An Economic Theory of Democracy. Chapter 3.

5 NON VOTING What about the 50% that don’t vote

6 Why Americans Don’t Vote Institutional Factors Demographic Factors Behavioral Factors

7 Why People Don’t Vote: Institutions

8 Registration Registration is a large restriction on voting States control this power Once you register, you are more likely to vote

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10 Other Institutional Barriers Restrictions on suffrage Electoral Competition

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12 WHY PEOPLE DON’T VOTE Demographics

13 Why Young People Don’t Vote Are Unfamiliar with the system- Are one step above Gypsies Have less formal and political education

14 Traditional Demographics Race Gender Region

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16 Low Turnout Because of Behavioral Factors

17 Low Social Capital Writings of Robert Putnam We are not connected to the community As a Result, we don’t participate in politics

18 Low turnout because of partisanship Fewer People Identify with one of the parties Increasingly difficult to target voters Partisan districts depress turnout

19 Mobilization and turnout in 2008 Voter Contacts and support The Long Campaign in 2008 advantaged Obama.

20 Campaign Contact

21 HIGH AND LOW STIMULUS ELECTIONS The Saw-tooth Pattern

22 Presidential elections Why Higher What is the Result- the exciting saw-tooth pattern

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24 Midyear Tends to be boring

25 THE RATIONAL VOTER MODEL Should We Vote?

26 Normative Democratic Theory The Classical View of Voting How We should Participate

27 Rational Choice Theory of Voting When Should We Vote? Who should We Vote For?

28 The Purpose of an Election is Simple A mandate for the incumbent to continue their policies or A call for the opposition to Change things

29 Our Choices are Simple 1.Abstain 2.Vote for Our Favorite Party 3.Vote for Some other Party Because our Favorite Party has no Chance 4.Vote For a Party at Random

30 WHY WE ABSTAIN Stay at home

31 Rational Abstention The Costs of Voting versus the benefits of voting The costs often outweigh the benefits The Result is many eligible citizens never vote (rational abstention)

32 Why Abstainers are important Parties have no idea who is going to abstain Parties cannot ignore these people There are enough of these people to shift the electoral balance Their abstention often does not harm them

33 The Problems of Abstaining Democracy Cannot Exist The costs of democracy are too high The benefits are too low.

34 SHOULD I VOTE OR ABSTAIN?

35 The Rational Voting Calculus C= Cost of participation B= Benefit of voting P= Probability that your vote matters D= The civic duty term C> PB +D We Stay At Home C< PB +D We Vote

36 Voting is Not Costless Time Costs Information Costs Monetary Costs

37 Information Costs The costs of becoming an informed voter Learning who is running Understanding the Differences between candidates Information costs are especially high Information

38 Time Costs Registration Travel The vote itself Ways that we have reduced these over time?

39 The Monetary Costs of Voting Poll Taxes- Not any more Costs of not working Opportunity Costs

40 The Impact of High Cost is Low Turnout Not all costs are born equally Those who vote less have less political power This prevents people from making the “wrong Decision”

41 High Costs can deter voters, even if they have a preference

42 BP +D Benefits, Probability of Deciding an Election, Civic Duty

43 Probability of Deciding the Election (P Term) How Close you believe the election to be How Many People are expected to vote If no one votes, democracy collapses

44 Does the P Term Matter? Some Say No Examine the Cumulative Effect We do not vote for the sake of casting the tie- breaking ballot

45 Benefits From Voting (B Term) Direct benefits Policy Benefits Desire to see one side win

46 Civic Duty (D Term) Democracy is the reward for voting If you believe this to be a high reward, you should vote It can be a long term investment

47 The Rational Voting Calculus C> PB +D We Stay At Home C< PB +D We Vote


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