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POLITICAL PARTIES, CAMPAIGNS, ELECTIONS, VOTING AND MONEY Pt. 1. History of US Political Parties. Parties are not mentioned in the Constitution George Washington (the only nonpartisan president) thought parties were a terrible idea.
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POLITICAL PARTIES, CAMPAIGNS, ELECTIONS, VOTING AND MONEYPt. 1
History of US Political Parties • Parties are not mentioned in the Constitution • George Washington (the only nonpartisan president) thought parties were a terrible idea. • However, parties sprang up almost immediately after our political system came into being
History of US Political Parties • Welch, p. 153 • 1789: Federalists (pro-Constitution) vs. Anti-Federalists (anti-Constitution) • 1796: Federalists (Hamilton, northern mercantile interests) vs. Democratic-Republicans (Jefferson, southern agrarians) • 1815: Federalists die out as a party, brief non-partisan “Era of Good Feeling”
History of US Political Parties • 1828: Democratic-Republicans split into National Republicans (John Quincy Adams) and Democrats (Andrew Jackson); the Jacksonian party is the direct ancestor of today’s Democratic Party • 1832-1850’s: Whigs compete with Democrats • 1856: Republican Party formed by different groups of Midwestern anti-slavery activists; this is the direct ancestor of today’s Republican Party
History of US Political Parties • 1877: End of post-Civil War Reconstruction, Democratic ex-Confederates regain power in the South and essentially eliminate the Republican Party there • 1896: Realignment: Republicans become the majority party everywhere except the South • 1932: Realignment: Franklin D. Roosevelt’s election establishes the Democrats as the new majority party; African-American voters begin to shift their loyalty from the party of Lincoln to the party of FDR
History of US Political Parties • 1950’s-1960’s: The Republican Party begins to re-emerge in the South. By the 1990’s, it is the clear majority party among white Southerners, who were traditionally the most Democratic group in the nation. Black Southerners (and black voters nationally) remain overwhelmingly Democratic.
History of US Political Parties • The US has had the same two major parties for 150 years. This is an extraordinarily stable political system, just as having the same Constitution since 1789 has given us an extraordinarily stable system of government. • By comparison, France adopted its current Constitution and party system in 1958 • The countries of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have developed completely new political systems since the fall of Communism in the late 1980’s-early 1990’s.
Moderation • Most US political discourse takes place around the center of the political system, with Democrats slightly to the left of center and Republicans slightly to the right of center. • More extreme ideologies (communism, fascism) have never gained traction in the US • Americans’ self-described ideology (Welch, p. 142): • Moderate 32% • Slightly liberal + liberal + extremely liberal 26% • Slightly conservative + cons. + extremely cons. 44% • Moderate + slightly liberal + slightly conservative 59%
Why Only Two Major Parties at a Time? • Single-member districts • Only one person is elected from an area (Congressional district, state legislative district, etc.) • Winner-take-all elections • The one person who gets the most votes wins the whole thing. • In the 2008 presidential election, Obama got 52% of the vote and McCain got 45%. • McCain does not get to be President 45% of the time. • Majority: the most votes • Plurality: the most votes in an election involving more than two people, even if not a majority • 1992: Clinton 43%, Bush 38%, Perot 19%
In any given presidential election, 40% will support the Democratic candidate and 40% will support the Republican…which voters decide the election?
Presidential elections are usually decided by the 20% of voters in the middle. They tend to be independent and moderate. Successful presidential candidates therefore tend to be perceived by most voters as moderate rather than extremely liberal or conservative.
The one candidate who gets the largest number of votes in each of these seats wins the seat
In order to win one seat, you have to get the most votes in one district 2010 (6 Districts) 1: 65%R, 29%D, 6% Others = 1 R 2: 53%R, 44%D, 3% Others = 1 R 3: 62%R, 36%D, 2% Others = 1 R 4: 63%R, 29% D, 8% Others = 1 R 5: 55%R, 45%D = 1 R 6: 63% D, 36%R = 1 D Total votes cast 1,337,008 R 753,932 =56% votes, 83% seats D 543,921 = 41% votes, 16% seats O 39,155 = 3% votes, 0% seats
Alternative: Proportional Representation • Many different types of PR systems, used in different countries, e.g., Germany, Britain, Israel • A group of people, usually selected by a party, runs for a group of seats (multi-member districts) • The party’s percentage of the vote translates into their percentage of the seats • Example: Seven US House seats • Voters vote for parties, not individual candidates • Republicans get 53% of the vote = 4 seats • Democrats get 38% of the vote = 2 seats • Libertarians get 9% of the vote = 1 seat • It is considerably easier for minor parties to win seats under PR than under SMD
Nomination vs. Election • Winning the party nomination for President requires appealing to the activists in your party. These people tend to be more ideologically extreme: Democratic activists are more liberal than the average voter, and Republican activists are more conservative than the average voter • Then you have to appeal both to the party base and to moderates in order to win the general election. • Candidates tend to run as more ideologically extreme during the primaries and more moderate during the general election.
Primaries • A primary election is held among candidates of the same party to win the party nomination for an office. The party nominees run against each other in the general election in November. • Open primary: All registered voters may vote. • Closed primary: Only voters who are registered as party members may vote (only D’s vote in the D primary, only R’s in the R primary) • Modified closed: Registered party members + independents may vote (D + I, but not R, in the D primary, R + I, but not D, in the R primary) • States such as South Carolina, which do not register voters by party, can’t have a closed primary.
Primaries • A couple of states have variations on these systems • Louisiana: Top two finishers in the primary, regardless of party, run against each other in the general election (may be two D or two R) • Washington: All candidates run against each other in the same primary, top finisher in each party competes in the general election • Runoff primaries: In nine Southern states, if no candidate gets a majority in the primary, the top two candidates have an additional election called a runoff; this is also true in NC but the threshold is 40%
Primaries and Caucuses • Most states use primary elections to select delegates to the national conventions which choose the party nominees for president and vice president • Caucuses are party organizational meetings. Some states (e.g., Iowa) use a caucus system to select their delegates • This involves attending a series of party meetings and being elected as a delegate to each meeting at a higher level • Precinct caucus = held at your neighborhood polling place • County convention = delegates from precinct caucuses • Congressional district convention = delegates from counties in a CD • State convention • National convention
Electoral College • We don’t have a national election for President and Vice President. We have 51 separate state elections (including DC) • Each state has a number of electoral votes equal to its number of Senators + Representatives • Wyoming: 2 Sens. + 1 Rep. = 3 electoral votes • California: 2 Sens. + 53 Reps. = 55 electoral votes • Under the Constitution, each state legislature determines how its electors are chosen
Electoral College • Each state + DC now has a law that electors are chosen by popular vote • BUT there is no right to vote for president under the US Constitution • The Florida legislature could simply have elected the state’s electors to solve the 2000 controversy – the popular vote wouldn’t have mattered at all • In all states but two, the candidate who gets the most popular votes gets all the electoral votes • In Maine and Nebraska, the candidate who gets the most votes in each congressional district gets one vote and the winner of the state as a whole gets two – Obama got 1 vote in Nebraska in 2008 while McCain got the rest
Electoral College • The candidate who gets the most electoral votes wins • Usually the same as the candidate who gets the most popular votes • Four times in US history, one candidate has gotten more popular votes and the other has gotten the most electoral votes • Didn’t happen between 1888 and 2000
2000 Election BUSH GORE • CT (8) 561,094 • FL (25) 2,912,790 • HI (4) 137,845 • MO (11) 1,189, 924 • RI (4) 130,555 • 816,015 • 2,912,253 • 205,286 • 1,111,138 • 249,508
2000 Election BUSH GORE • CT (8) 561,094 • FL (25) 2,912,790 * • HI (4) 137,845 • MO (11) 1,189, 924 * • RI (4) 130,555 • Pop vote 4,932,208 • Electoral vote 36 • 816,015 * • 2,912,253 • 205,286 * • 1,111,138 • 249,508 * • 5,294,200 • 16
How the Electoral College affects campaign strategy • The states that get the attention are the big, competitive, “swing” states (e.g., Ohio) • No point in campaigning in states where one candidate will win handily • SC is heavily R, DC heavily D • Romney doesn’t need to campaign in SC to win here, and there is no point in Obama campaigning here because he won’t win anyway • The reverse is true in DC
A majority (270) of the electoral vote is required to win… • http://ivn.us/neutral-zone/2012/10/25/what-happens-if-there-is-an-electoral-vote-tie/?fb_action_ids=895374166286&fb_action_types=og.likes&fb_source=timeline_og&action_object_map=%7B%22895374166286%22%3A236043489858390%7D&action_type_map=%7B%22895374166286%22%3A%22og.likes%22%7D&action_ref_map=[]
If there’s no majority • The electors meet in December. • The votes are reported to Congress. • The votes are counted at a joint session of the House and Senate. • If no one gets a majority, the House elects the President and the Senate elects the Vice President. • The House votes by state: Each state, regardless of population, gets one vote • Wyoming’s one representative gets one vote • California’s 55 representatives get one vote, total • States whose Reps. are equally split between D and R probably don’t vote
If there’s no majority in the Electoral College • The Republicans are currently the majority of a majority of House delegations. If this is the case after the elections, a majority of state delegations in the House would vote to elect Romney as president. • Senators vote individually for Vice President. If the Democrats regain control of the Senate, a majority of Senators would probably vote to elect Biden as vice president. • If there’s a tie in the Senate, the incumbent VP breaks the tie. Biden could break the tie to re-elect himself. • Result: President Romney, Vice President Biden • The 12th Amendment was adopted specifically to prevent a president and vice president from opposite parties from serving together. It’s worked ever since.