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(Presidential) Party Nominations

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1 (Presidential) Party Nominations

2 Important questions Why are nominations important to a party?
What should a party want in a nominee? Who in the party should decide who the nominee will be? What effect does the selection process have over the relationship between the “party” and the nominee?

3 How do parties select nominees?
In general, primaries Why might primaries be bad for the party? How might the party try to minimize those risks?

4 Nominating a presidential candidate
Delegates to the national nominating convention vote on who the nominee will be Delegates are chosen through primaries, caucuses, and conventions Dems/Reeps have different rules for selecting delegates

5 How does a candidate win the nomination?
Ultimately, by convincing primary voters/party activists That s/he is a good representative of the party That s/he can win the general election Convince them through: Campaigns (which cost money) Party elite endorsements Favorable media coverage ($$ again) (be the frontrunner!) Advantages of “winning” the “invisible primary”

6 Effects of the primary calendar
No primaries Effects on candidate behavior Effects on general election chances Importance of activists/elites Late, spread out primaries Frontloaded primaries

7 AP Delegate totals, March 17, 2004
(2,162 needed to win nomination)     Kerry:  Edwards: 530  Dean: 156     Clark: 73 Sharpton: 26  Kucinich: 22  Lieberman: 2  Gephardt: 2

8 How is frontloading (especially California setting a Feb
How is frontloading (especially California setting a Feb. 5 primary date) affecting the behavior of potential nominees for 2008? What role do party activists, elites, and rank and file voters play in this presidential nomination process?


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