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Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors. Chapter 6: Public Opinion and Political Action Chapter 9: Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 10: Elections and Voting Behavior. Civic Virtue and Participation. How Can Someone Participate?. Conventional Voting Campaigns Contacting elected officials
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Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors Chapter 6: Public Opinion and Political Action Chapter 9: Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 10: Elections and Voting Behavior
How Can Someone Participate? • Conventional • Voting • Campaigns • Contacting elected officials • Unconventional • Protest • Civil Disobedience • Boycotts
How Political Socialization and other Factors Influence Opinion Formation • Political Socialization • The process through which an individual acquires particular political orientations • The learning process by which people acquire their political beliefs and values
Why do People Vote? • Political Efficacy • Civic Duty • Voter Registration • Motor Voter Act-1993
Agents of Socialization • Family • School and Peers • Mass Media • Religious Beliefs • Race and Ethnicity • Gender • Age • Region
Issue Voting vs. Candidate Voting Liberal Conservative
Retrospective Voting What have you done for me lately?
Political Knowledge • Political knowledge and political participation have a reciprocal relationship. • Level of knowledge about history and politics low • Hurts Americans’ understanding of current political events • Geographically illiterate • Gender differences
Causes of the Decline in Voter Turnout Reading-Why voter turnout has declined Bowling Alone
Winner Take All vs. Proportional Single Member Congressional Districts
Types of Elections Primaries/Caucuses General Referendums Initiatives Recall
The Party Organizations • The 50 State Party Systems • Closed primaries: Only people who have registered with the party can vote for that party’s candidates. • Open primaries: Voters decide on Election Day whether they want to vote in the Democrat or Republican primary. • Blanket primaries: Voters are presented with a list of candidates from all parties. • State parties are better organized in terms of headquarters and budgets than they used to be.
Primaries v. Caucuses • Over years, trend has been to use primaries rather than caucuses to choose delegates • Caucus is the oldest, most party-oriented method of choosing delegates to the national conventions • Arguments for primaries • More democratic • More representative • A rigorous test for the candidate • Arguments for caucuses • Caucus participants more informed; more interactive and informative • Unfair scheduling affects outcomes • Frontloading (being first in the primary calendar) gives some primary states an advantage • Frontloading is the tendency to choose an early date on the primary schedule
Superdelegates • Delegate slot to the Democratic Party’s national convention that is reserved for an elected party official • Some rules originating in Democratic Party have been enacted as state laws thus applying them to the Republican Party as well.
Realignment • Party Realignment • Critical • Deviling (blip) • Reinstating • Maintaining • Critical Elections • Secular Realignment • Reading-V.O. Theory of Political Realignment
Congressional Elections Incumbency Presidential Coattails Redistricting Gerrymandering
The American People • The Regional Shift • Population shift from east to west • Reapportionment: the process of reallocating seats in the House of Representatives every 10 years on the basis of the results of the census
Sources of Political Contributions • Political money regulated by the federal government can come from • Individual Contributions • Political Action Committee Contributions • Political Party Contributions • Member-to-Candidate Contributions • Candidates’ Personal Contributions • Public Funds • Donations from the general tax revenues to the campaigns of qualifying presidential candidates • Matching funds • Availability
Money and Campaigning • The Maze of Campaign Finance Reforms • Federal Election Campaign Act (1974) • Created the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to administer campaign finance laws for federal elections • Created the Presidential Election Campaign Fund • Provided partial public financing for presidential primaries • Matching funds: Contributions of up to $250 are matched for candidates who meet conditions, such as limiting spending. • Provided full public financing for major party candidates in the general election • Required full disclosure and limited contributions
Money and Campaigning • The Maze of Campaign Finance Reforms • Soft Money: political contributions (not subject to contribution limits) earmarked for party-building expenses or generic party advertising • The McCain-Feingold Act (2002) banned soft money, increased amount of individual contributions, and limited “issue ads.” • 527s: independent groups that seek to influence political process but are not subject to contribution restricts because they do not directly seek election of particular candidates