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Civic Education Workshop. Day 2: Campaigns and Elections. What do elections do?. Select Candidates Establish Policy Directions Formalize the Citizen’s Role in Government Equalize Citizens (one person, one vote) Legitimizes Government to Citizens (Good or Bad?)
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Civic Education Workshop Day 2: Campaigns and Elections
What do elections do? • Select Candidates • Establish Policy Directions • Formalize the Citizen’s Role in Government • Equalize Citizens (one person, one vote) • Legitimizes Government to Citizens (Good or Bad?) • Moral Development of Citizens (Rousseau)
Three Theories of Voting • Median Voter Theory • Responsible Parties Theory • Hybrid Theory
Median Voter Theory • Assumes candidates want to win • Assumes voters vote for candidate closest to them • This creates pressure for candidates to campaign near the middle (median) and adopt policy near the middle
Median Voter Model Campaign Campaign Policy Policy
Responsible Parties Model • Assumes candidates have policy preferences • Assumes voters vote for candidates moving policy in their preferred direction • This creates pressures for candidates to campaign apart from each other and adopt policies away from the middle
Responsible Parties Model Campaign Campaign Policy Policy
Reality is a Hybrid Model • Candidates pulled away from the middle by: • Activists • Nomination Process • Own policy preferences • Candidates pushed to the middle by: • Need to win 50% +1 in the General Election
Hybrid Model Campaign Campaign Policy Policy
Role of Campaigns • Candidates communicate with voters • Candidates learn about voters • Voters learn about candidates • Voters learn about other voters (polls) • Candidates define the choice for voters • Campaigns shape the informational context within which voters find themselves
Campaigns DO NOT . . . • Change many people’s minds on an issue • unless it is a new issue • Let candidates easily change their own positions on issues
Campaigns DO . . . • Change the perceived importance of different issues for voters • Draw contrasts between candidates • Allow candidates to focus on what helps them AND what hurts their opponent. • Whomever wins in defining the nature of the choice has the advantage
Which Issue is Salient? A X B Taxes A X B Abortion Candidate A will want to focus on Tax Issues. Candidate B will want to focus on Abortion. Voter X votes based on which issue matters most to him/her.
Incumbents vs. Challengers • Incumbents have an advantage from • Name recognition • Two or more years of service • Established organizations and money • They were good enough to win last time • In order to win, challengers must • Give voters a reason to vote FOR them • Give voters a reason to vote AGAINST the incumbent
National vs. Local campaigns • Campaigns have their largest impact on local elections because they are the dominant source of information • Local elections use personal contacts, door-to-door efforts, local events, etc. to get the candidate’s name out (Retail Politics) • Voters don’t support candidates they don’t know • Incumbency advantage • Importance of Party Labels