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The Media and The Future. April 30, 2013. Opportunities to discuss course content. Today 11-2 Wednesday 10-2. Learning Objectives. Discuss the Electoral College and the strategy of presidential campaigns
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The Media and The Future April 30, 2013
Opportunities to discuss course content • Today 11-2 • Wednesday 10-2
Learning Objectives • Discuss the Electoral College and the strategy of presidential campaigns • Identify and describe the formal and informal institutions involved in the electoral process
Readings • Chapter 3: Partisan Change (72-87) (Flanigan) • On Reserve: McCutcheon, Chuck. The Elections of 2012: Outcomes and Analysis. “Lessons Learned from the 2012 Elections” pp 41-42
Horse Racing Today • It Once was the Sport of Kings • The Running of the Urinals
Paid Media • Unmediated • Control the Message • More outlets than ever
A Record Breaking Year • 1 million ads were aired • Both Sides were overwhelmingly negative • Obama Spent more and Ran More Ads • The Best Ads
Herman Cain Bizarre Ads • The Rabbit • Smoking
Targeting Ads and their Effect • Uncommitted voters vs Partisans • When are they Most Effective? • Ads are a sign of political viability
Candidate Credibility • We have to trust the messenger • Issue Ownership • Try to focus on your best issue
Getting More Votes • Delivering a positive message about your candidate (mobilizing) • Deliver a negative message about the opposition (mobilizing/demobilizing)
Biographical Ads • Inform us about the Candidate • Very important early in the campaign • Obama doesn’t need to run these….
Issue Ads • Focus on a specific issue or a policy area • Associate yourself with favorable policies • Do not mention issue weakness
Examples of Issue Ads • The Bear in the Woods in 1984 • Mike Huckabee and Chuck Norris... • Hillary Clinton- Attack/Issue Ad
Attack Ads • The Norm Rather than the Exception • The Mother of all Attack Ads
The Effect of Attack ads on voters • Some voters become disenchanted and disaffected • Your Base Loves them!
How Effective are these • If they didn’t work, candidates wouldn’t run them • The Lessons of 1988 • The Revolving Door • Willie Horton
Why They Work and Who uses them more • We don’t trust politicians • They are more memorable and informative • Challengers and vulnerable incumbents use them
How To Deal with them • Defend the Charges • Counterattack on the same issue or up the ante- The Puppy Ad • Attack the Credibility of your opponent
How not to deal with them • Do Nothing • If you get Punched in the nose, you must punch back
How the attack can backfire • If you are seen as being too evil
Ads Can Backfire • You Do it too Early…. The Lesson from 2012 • You do it too late to make a difference • You bring a knife to a gun fight
The New Media • Innovative in 2008 • Candidates had a lot to like • They didn’t like the anarchy
Social Media in 2012 • No new Innovations • Obama Retains the social media advantage • More Control • More negative
It will Survive The Electoral College
Why No Change • To Difficult to Amend the Constitution • The Fear of Unanticipated Consequences
District Plan • Maine and Nebraska use this system • Popular with the party that Controls the House of Representatives • Could pass without an amendment
National Popular Vote Interstate Compact • Would provide a back door to 538 • Popular after 2000 • Momentum has Slowed • Now largely partisan
Why No Change • Institutional Difficulties • More hits than Misses • Unanticipated Consequences
The Republicans • Didn’t Like their 2008 Rules • Didn’t Like their 2012 Rules • Will Reevaluate for 2016
The Conventions • The late convention is no longer a financial positive • Low Ratings, Low Excitement • 3 Days and earlier Dates
Big Money • Outcome • Corporations have stayed quiet • Develop new strategies • Big $ likely to stay
Short Term Deviations • Congressional Elections • Weaker partisan ties • Poor challengers • These can result in a landslide for one party
How To Wreck a Party Realignments
What is a Realignment • A Durable shift in voting Patterns • The New Party Kills the Old • Majority Parties become minorities
Who Switches in a Realignment • Hard Cores do not switch • Independents do • New Voters • Weak partisans become strong Partisans
What Causes a Realignment • Economic or social crisis • Failure of the party to interpret change • A changed electorate
The Policy Implications • A mandate for change • Major New Policies • Continued electoral success
Options for the Losers • Ignore the issue • Try to absorb it • Change
Good Times A Theory of critical elections
Kinds of Realignments • Secular Realignments- happen over time • Regional Realignments • Critical Elections
VICTORY Defeat same Maintaining Deviating Converting Realigning change Types of Election Majority Party
A Realigning Election • The Actual Critical Election • 1800 • 1860 • 1896 • 1930 • High Intensity • High Turnout
A Maintaining Election • A boring election • The party in power remains in power • 1936, 1940, 1944, 1948, 1960