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HOW DOES HE/SHE GET IN OFFICE? Presidential Selection/Election.

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Presentation on theme: "HOW DOES HE/SHE GET IN OFFICE? Presidential Selection/Election."— Presentation transcript:

1 HOW DOES HE/SHE GET IN OFFICE? Presidential Selection/Election

2 The Original Idea The Framers gave much deliberation to the selection of the president  People were against both ways; congress and the people Popular vote was out  Largely due to an information gap Settled on presidential electors  Each would cast two votes  Winner becomes POTUS, second becomes VP Came to be known as the electoral college

3 Breakdown of the System The original system began to break down in 1796  Due to political parties John Adams was POTUS (Federalist) Thomas Jefferson was VP (Democratic-Republican) Election of 1800 took 36 ballots in the house to decide  Democratic-Republican electors split their votes  Created a tie for president  Parties now “nominated” candidates for President and VP

4 The 12 th Amendment Added to the Constitution in 1804 Made only one major change Electors now vote for President on one ballot Vote for VP on separate ballot

5 Nominations and Conventions No mention of conventions or nominations in Constitution  Built by the political parties themselves  Party out of power usually goes first  Can be great financially for the host city Each state sends delegates Complicated formulas based on electoral size and other factors  Over 2200 for Republicans  Over 4000 for Democrats

6 Primaries Most of the delegates selected come from primaries Primary is an election where voters:  Choose some or all of a State party organizations delegates to their party’s convention  Express a preference among contenders for the election First primaries appears in early 1900s  Combating corruption and political bosses Candidates are selected based on their availability to get elected to the presidency  Name, money, etc. Primaries can be very hotly contested  Usually for party out of power

7 National Convention First two days are spent adopting the party platform and having a key note speaker  Platform is the party principles and beliefs  Key not speeches glorify the party Last two days are spent nominating the candidate  VP is selected based on the candidates wishes  Presidential candidate is usually selected on one ballot

8 The Nominee Chosen for likelihood to get elected  Well known records in office  Free of controversy  Governors are very common, as are senators  Most are protestant  Come from larger states  Have a healthy appearance and solid family  Ability to project ones self in public is key as well

9 The Electoral College Today Electors are chosen by popular vote  Generally awarded on a winner take all basis  Meet on the Monday after the second Wednesday in December  President technically elected on January 6 th Requires 270 votes to become president  If no majority, the House decides POTUS  Each state delegation has one vote Senate decides VP in a tie  All 100 vote in senate

10 Flaws in the College First: Winner of popular vote may not win the electoral vote  Due to the winner take all nature of the electoral vote  Also due to the way votes are proportioned  Happened in 1824, 1876, 1888, 2000 Second: Nothing requires electors to vote for the candidate favored by popular vote in their state  Faithless electors: happened eleven times  Never affected an election Third: election could be decided in the House  Each states has one “vote”  Could bog down the election process


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