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Winnowing the Field: Nominations of Presidential Candidates

Explore the relationship between presidential candidates and political parties, discussing the role of the president in leading or being controlled by the party. Understand the process of candidate nominations and their impact on the political landscape.

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Winnowing the Field: Nominations of Presidential Candidates

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  1. Winnowing the Field: Nominations of Presidential Candidates

  2. Free Write/Quiz • Describe the relationship between the presidential candidates and the political parties in the reading for today. • What should the relationship between the president and his political party be? Should he lead the party, and decide what it stands for? Or should it control him? Why? What does your answer imply about his relationship to the other party? Do you think the president should be “above” partisan politics?

  3. How do the electors decide who the candidates are for the presidency?

  4. How do the electors decide who the candidates are for the presidency?Answer: Party nominations

  5. First Two Methods of Nominating Presidential Candidates “King Caucus”: 1800-1828 Convention System: 1832-1912

  6. Washington’s Farewell Address • The common and continual mischiefs of the spirit of party are sufficient to make it the interest and duty of a wise people to discourage and restrain it. • It serves always to distract the public councils and enfeeble the public administration. It agitates the community with ill-founded jealousies and false alarms, kindles the animosity of one part against another, foments occasionally riot and insurrection. It opens the door to foreign influence and corruption, which finds a facilitated access to the government itself through the channels of party passions. Thus the policy and the will of one country are subjected to the policy and will of another.

  7. The first parties Adams: The Federalists Jefferson: The Democratic-Republicans

  8. King Caucus 1800-1828 • Members of Congress met to nominate presidential candidates from their party • Who is advantaged in this system? • Problems with this system?

  9. Criticism of the Caucus System • “If anything will arouse the freemen of America it must be the arrogance of a number of members of Congress to assemble as an electioneering caucus to control the citizens in their own rights…Is there any paragraph in the Constitution which gives them such an authority or even countenances such a proceeding? After Congress have accomplished their legislative business have they a right to dictate in the choice of an executive?” -Benjamin Austin, Massachusetts Republican, 1803

  10. Jackson, Van Buren and the Party Convention System1832-1912

  11. Van Buren on a new Party Convention “It is the best and probably the only practicable mode of concentrating the entire vote of the opposition [to Adams] and of effecting what is of still greater importance, the substantial reorganization of the old Republican party…It would greatly improve the condition of the Republicans of the North and Middle states by substituting party principle for personal preference as one of the leading points of the contest.” —Van Buren in letter to the editor of the Richmond Enquirer, Jan., 1827

  12. Elements of Convention system • Conventions nominate candidates • Candidates subservient to party • Mass participation in parties

  13. Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, 19th Century

  14. Elements of Convention system • Conventions nominate candidates • Candidates subservient to parties • Mass participation in parties • Patronage

  15. What is the relationship between the president and his party like in these systems?How does it compare to your ideal?

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