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Reviewing Political Parties and Voting Behavior. What are Political Parties?. They are a linkage institution- they link the public with policy-making As such they seek compromise They are a group of people who come together to get people elected. They want to control government. Functions.
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What are Political Parties? • They are a linkage institution- they link the public with policy-making • As such they seek compromise • They are a group of people who come together to get people elected. They want to control government
Functions • Nominate*** Most important function • Inform/activate supporters • Act as a bonding agent • Govern • Perform watchdog duties
Remember…. • Framers saw pol. Parties as factions and were opposed to them • Our parties tend to be moderate, therefore unifying rather than dividing the public
History of the Parties • Beginning- Federalists and Anti-Federalists (aka Democratic Republicans • 1800- then what? • 1850- a splinter party broke off and became a major party- which one? • 1860-1910- which party dominated? • 1930s- now which party dominated? Why? • 1950s-present- era of ______________. Why?
Basics • The Constitution gives ___________ the right to decide who can vote • Over time we’ve seen the elimination of voting restrictions
Suffrage Amendments • 15th • 17th • 19th • 23rd • 24th • 26th
Who can vote? • General Requirements: Citizenship, residency, age • Registration- intended to prevent fraud and used since the early 1900s but this is the biggest reason people don’t vote • This year we’ve seen huge problems in registration with states making it more difficult • 1995 Motor Voter Law was supposed to ease registration process • Past- Literacy requirement and poll taxes
Deciding who is in the Electorate • Reapportionment- • Redistribution of a fixed number of seats (House of Reps. At 435) • done every 10 years after the census • Can change the outcome of an election • Redistricting • Redrawing the boundaries of legislative districts • Done by states (and some states with history of discrimination have to get theirs reviewed)
Gerrymandering • What is it? • How has it been used to disenfranchise voters?
Civil Rights and Suffrage • 1957 Civil Rights Act- set up U.S. Civil Rights commission and est. federal voting referees • 1964 Civil Rights Act- forbids discrimination in voter registration • 1965 Voting Rights Act- applied to all elections and forbids new election laws unless approved by the Department of Justice • 1970 Amendments extend laws for another 5 years
Why People Don’t Vote • Ballot fatigue- too many offices to vote for • People who believe their vote doesn’t count or who distrust politics • Media • Not registered- this is actually the biggest problem
So, who Votes? • Voters tend to have higher incomes, education, and occupations • More people vote when the election is close
Who Votes for Whom? Republican Democrat Middle-class and lower income Union supporters/members Jews Catholics Blacks by a very large margin • Higher income • White • Protestants • Men by a small margin