Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CHAPTER 7 The Electoral Process. ELECTIONS  Most States hold their elections to fill State offices on the same date Congress has set for national elections:

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 7 The Electoral Process. ELECTIONS  Most States hold their elections to fill State offices on the same date Congress has set for national elections:"— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 7 The Electoral Process

2 ELECTIONS  Most States hold their elections to fill State offices on the same date Congress has set for national elections: In November of every even-numbered year. The “Tuesday-after- the-first-Monday” formula prevents election day from falling on 1) Sundays and 2) The first day of the month. (payday).

3 THE NOMINATING PROCESS  The nominating process is the process of candidate selection. Nomination: The process of candidate selection in an electoral system.  This is a critical stage in the electoral process. Dictatorships hold what is known as a general election. General Elections: Regularly scheduled elections at which voters make the final selection of officeholders.

4 THE NOMINATING PROCESS  Typically, the ballots used in those elections list only one candidate for each office, the candidate from the ruling party, and then that party wins the majority.  In the United States, there are five ways in which nominations are made.  1) Self Announcement. This is the oldest form of the nominating process. A person who wants to run for office simply announces that fact.

5 FIVE STEPS TO NOMINATION  2) The Caucus. A caucus: is a group of like minded people who meet to select the candidates they will support in an upcoming election.  3) The Convention. All major-party presidential nominees have been chosen by conventions since the 1830’s.

6 FIVE STEPS TO NOMINATION  4) The Direct Primary. A direct primary is an intra-party election. Direct primary: An election held within a party to pick that party’s candidates for the general election.  In most States, State law requires that the major parties use the primary to choose their candidates for the Senate, House of Rep., governors, and all State offices.

7 FIVE STEPS TO NOMINATION  4a)The Closed Primary. Today, 27 States provide for the closed primary. Closed primary: A party nominating election in which only declared party members can vote. The party’s primary is closed to all but those party members.

8 FIVE STEPS TO NOMINATION  4b) The Open Primary. This form was how the direct primary first appeared. Open primary: A party- nominating election in which ANY qualified voter can take part. This style is found in 23 States.  WA, AK, and CA use what is known as a blanket primary. Blanket primary: a voting process in which voters receive a long ballot containing the names of all contenders, regardless of party, and can vote however they choose.

9 FIVE STEPS TO NOMINATION  4c) The Runoff Primary. In most States, candidates only need to win a plurality of the votes cast in the primary to win their party’s nomination. If no one wins a majority in a race, a runoff primary is held a few weeks later. Runoff primary: A primary in which the top two vote-getters in the first direct primary face one another. Winner gets the nomination.

10 FIVE STEPS TO NOMINATION  4d) The Nonpartisan Primary. In most States all or nearly all of the elected school and municipal offices are filled in nonpartisan elections. Nonpartisan elections: Elections in which candidates are not identified by party labels.  4e) The Presidential Primary. The presidential primary is an election that is held as one part of the process by which presidential candidates are chosen.

11 FIVE STEPS TO NOMINATION  5) Petition. This method is used widely at the local level. Candidates for public office are nominated by means of petitions signed by a certain number of qualified voters in the election district.

12 ELECTIONS  Most States hold their elections to fill State offices on the same date Congress has set for national elections: In November of every even-numbered year. The “Tuesday-after- the-first-Monday” formula prevents election day from falling on 1) Sundays and 2) The first day of the month. (payday).

13 ELECTIONS  Millions of Americans cast their ballots before election day in a process known as absentee voting. Absentee voting: a process by which people can vote without actually going to their polling places on election day.

14 ELECTIONS  On election day, if a strong candidate is running for office, this leads to a concept known as the coattail effect. The coattail effect: The effect of a strong candidate running for office at the top of the ballot helping to attract voters to other candidates on the party’s ticket.  In effect, the lesser-known office seekers “rides the coattails” of the more prestigious personality. Ex: Ronald Reagan 1980 and 1984.

15 ELECTIONS  A precinct: is a voting district. Precincts are the smallest geographic units for the conduct of elections. State law restricts their size, an area with no more than 500-1,000 qualified voters. A polling place: the place where the voters who live in a precinct actually vote, is located somewhere in or near each precinct.

16 ELECTIONS  Each State now provides for a secret ballot. That is, State law requires that ballots be cast in such manner that others cannot know how a person has voted. A ballot: is the device by which a voter registers a choice in an election.  It can take a number of different forms.

17 BALLOTS  The Australian Ballot was devised in Australia in 1856. This style of ballot remains the basic form of the ballot in the United States.

18 BALLOTS  The Office-Group Ballot is the original form of the Australian. It is also known as the Massachusetts ballot. On the office-group ballot, the candidates for an office are grouped together under the title of that office.

19 BALLOTS  The Party-Column Ballot is also known as the Indiana Ballot. It lists each party’s candidates in a column under the party’s name. Most people favor the office-group form because it encourages voter judgment and split- ticket voting.

20 MONEY AND ELECTIONS  Parties and their candidates draw their money from two basic sources: private contributors and the public treasury.  Private givers come in various shapes and sizes: 1) Small contributors: Those who giver $5-$100. Only 10% ever make campaign contributions.

21 MONEY AND ELECTIONS  2) Wealthy individuals and families. The “Fat Cats” so to speak, who can make large donations and find it in their best interest to make them.  3) Candidates. Both the incumbent and challengers. Ross Perot holds the all time record: $65 MILLION of his own money in 1992.

22 MONEY AND ELECTIONS  4) Various nonparty groups. Especially Political Action Committees (PACS). Political Action Committees (PACS): The political extension of special-interest groups which have a major stake in public policy.

23 MONEY AND ELECTIONS  5) Temporary organizations. Groups formed for the immediate purposes of a campaign, including fund-raising.  Then, too, parties and their candidates often hold fund-raisers of various sorts. The most common are the $100, $500, $1,000 a plate luncheons, dinners, picnics, receptions. Some of these events reach $100,000.

24 MONEY AND ELECTIONS  Public funds-subsidies from the federal and some State treasuries-are now another prime source of campaign money. A subsidy: is a grant of money, usually from a government. Subsidies have so far been most important at the presidential level.

25 THE FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION  The Federal Election Commission administers all federal law dealing with campaign finance since 1974. The laws that the FEC is supposed to enforce cover four broad areas:  1) disclosure of campaign finance data.  2) place limits on campaign contributions.  3) place limits on campaign expenditures.  4) provide public funding for several parts of the presidential election.

26 HARD AND SOFT MONEY  Ever since the 1960’s, federal campaign finance laws have placed limits on hard money. Hard money: Campaign money that is subject to regulations by the FEC.  Until 2002, those campaign laws did not limit soft money. Soft money: Money given to State and local party organizations for voting-related activities.


Download ppt "CHAPTER 7 The Electoral Process. ELECTIONS  Most States hold their elections to fill State offices on the same date Congress has set for national elections:"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google