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Elections How are candidates selected? Nomination – selecting of candidates for office How? Most states use a Direct Primary – an election held within.

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Presentation on theme: "Elections How are candidates selected? Nomination – selecting of candidates for office How? Most states use a Direct Primary – an election held within."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Elections

3 How are candidates selected? Nomination – selecting of candidates for office How? Most states use a Direct Primary – an election held within a party to pick one candidate for an office cclosed primary – only registered party members can vote oopen primary – any voter can vote

4 What are some other ways to make nominations? Caucus – a group of like-minded people meet to select candidates – as political parties grew, caucuses faded out – still used in places for local nominations in some areas ( New England) Convention – a meeting of party members

5 …other ways? self-announcement – a person who wants to run for office declares themselves as a candidate -- oldest method – still used in some small town & rural levels petition – signatures of a certain required number of qualified voters - used on local level & usually required by state for minor party or independent candidates

6 ….more elections stuff…. What level of gov is in charge of elections? eelections are largely governed by state laws, but some things, such as dates, are set by federal law ….some terms… pprecinct – voting district ppolling place – place where voters actually vote – schools, firehouse….. bballot – device used to register votes

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10 What is the Electoral College and how does it work? …or does it?...... An indirect system of electing the president Why?? ….. Founding fathers…… We know best! Number of electors for each state equals # of reps & senators in Congress

11 Electoral Votes map …subject to change every 10 years...WHY? Census - #s are redistributed according to population changes

12 All or nothin’, baby!!! People cast vote ---- “popular vote” Candidate who wins popular vote in state wins all electoral votes for state … but… what if they only win by a little bit?? ……Doesn’t matter!! …..Winner takes all !!

13 …so, couldn’t someone win an election without winning the popular vote?????? …ah…funny you should ask….. Election of 2000

14 What the heck happened???? popular vote % states won electoral votes Gore 50,996,116 48 21 266 Bush 50,456,169 48 30 271 …and the winner is…….. …. what happened in Florida????

15 Paper and Pencil Ballot …many were disqualified if mistake & did not get chance to re-do if votes were tallied at county headquarters

16 ...and the butterfly ballots in Palm Beach County……. …. voting for Gore or Buchanan….?????

17 …interesting results………

18 Bush vs Gore Gore wants re-count of Florida (25 electoral votes) Florida Supreme court orders recount in some counties Bush takes to Supreme Court …. and the rest is history……..

19 …. OK, so…… any suggestions…..???? Direct Election with Instant Runoff VotingDirect Election with Instant Runoff Voting Proportional Allocation of Electoral Votes Direct Vote with Plurality Rule Congressional District Method National Bonus Plan Binding Proposal Proportional Allocation of Electoral Votes Direct Vote with Plurality Rule Congressional District Method National Bonus Plan Binding Proposal

20 Direct Election with Instant Run-Off Voting voters rank preferences direct vote – with or w/out electoral college if no one has majority, lowest candidate eliminated & votes counted again using second choice repeated until candidate has majority eliminates “spoiler” dynamic of third parties would insure majority, nationwide winner

21 Proportional Allocation of Electoral Votes splits each state’s electoral votes in accordance with popular vote percentages may increase voter turnout & encourage campaigning in smaller states problems with how to divide single elector

22 Direct Vote with Plurality Rule abolish electoral college one person, one vote candidate with most votes is winner does not insure majority winner does not eliminate spoiler dynamic of third parties requires constitutional amendment

23 Congressional District Method divides electoral votes by district does not address disproportional problems with electoral college can cause redistricting problems (“Gerrymandering”) National Bonus Plan awards extra electoral votes as a bonus to the winner of the popular vote

24 Campaign Financing Hard Money - money given directly to a candidate’s campaign by individuals, businesses, organizations, or interest groups Must be reported Amount is limited Campaign financing laws have become more specific and more enforced  2002 – new regulations

25 Soft money - money indirectly given for a candidate’s campaign Given to a political party for “party building” Given to an interest group that endorses a candidate - ex – Individual gives money to NRA campaign fund  NRA runs a TV ad endorsing McCain Is not reported or limited “loopholes”

26 Question…………… Should campaign financing be limited so that each candidate has the same amount of money to spend????? What do YOU think & why?????


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