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Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 10. How does a candidate gain a party’s nomination for President? Nomination  Official endorsement of a candidate for.

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Presentation on theme: "Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 10. How does a candidate gain a party’s nomination for President? Nomination  Official endorsement of a candidate for."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 10

2 How does a candidate gain a party’s nomination for President? Nomination  Official endorsement of a candidate for office by a political party Candidate chosen for a few reasons:  Momentum  Money  Media Attention

3 Are presidential campaigns too long? Candidates for POTUS announce they are running office almost two years before the election!  Is this too long?  When did Barack Obama begin his campaign for POTUS?

4 What happens after everyone says they are running for POTUS? We hold elections 2 types:  Primary elections State elections held before the Political parties national conventions  One goal = determine the candidates for each party!  **This takes place the year before the general election.  Caucuses state citizens meet to vote on who their state will nominate for each political party.  Used to be just state representatives who voted in caucuses

5 Why do Primaries matter? It eliminates weak competition.  Nomination game is an elimination contest  Goal is to win: Majority system  Candidate needs 50.1% to win Plurality system  Candidate needs more votes than everyone else  Does not have to be 50%  Whoever gets the most states to vote for them wins the party nomination!

6 How is the caucus different from the primary? 2 differences: 2 Types of Primaries:  Open Primary  Open to any voter as long as they register for that political party before they vote  Closed Primary  Open only to registered political party members  Can not register day of election 2 Types of Caucus:  Open  Anyone can participate  Closed  Only registered party members Iowa is First However they go, so does the nation!

7 Second Difference….the way they vote. Primary Election Caucus Election

8 What are some problems with the primary and caucus system? Disproportionate attention to early primaries  Iowa  New Hampshire Money plays too big a role. Participation in primaries and caucuses is low  20% vote in primaries

9 So what happens after the primaries? We are off to the Party conventions.  Held to nominate a candidate for each political party.  National conventions provide great drama. Sometimes leads to duels…  Hamilton vs. Burr  Significant rallying point for parties  Presidential nominee gives rallying speech. Talks about party platform  Party’s position on issues of the day.

10 Burr vs. Hamilton… http://www.mrbach.net/documents/multimedia _2.html http://www.mrbach.net/documents/multimedia _2.html

11 2008 Democratic National Convention

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15 2008 Republican National Convention

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19 Next Come the Debates…

20 We are off to election day…


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