1 / 58

The Media and The Future

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

siran
Download Presentation

The Media and The Future

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Media and The Future April 30, 2013

  2. Opportunities to discuss course content • Today 11-2 • Wednesday 10-2

  3. 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

  4. 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

  5. Horse Racing Today • It Once was the Sport of Kings • The Running of the Urinals

  6. Paid Media in 2012

  7. Paid Media • Unmediated • Control the Message • More outlets than ever

  8. A Record Breaking Year • 1 million ads were aired • Both Sides were overwhelmingly negative • Obama Spent more and Ran More Ads • The Best Ads

  9. Herman Cain Bizarre Ads • The Rabbit • Smoking

  10. Targeting Ads and their Effect • Uncommitted voters vs Partisans • When are they Most Effective? • Ads are a sign of political viability

  11. Candidate Credibility • We have to trust the messenger • Issue Ownership • Try to focus on your best issue

  12. Getting More Votes • Delivering a positive message about your candidate (mobilizing) • Deliver a negative message about the opposition (mobilizing/demobilizing)

  13. Biographical Ads • Inform us about the Candidate • Very important early in the campaign • Obama doesn’t need to run these….

  14. Issue Ads • Focus on a specific issue or a policy area • Associate yourself with favorable policies • Do not mention issue weakness

  15. Examples of Issue Ads • The Bear in the Woods in 1984 • Mike Huckabee and Chuck Norris... • Hillary Clinton- Attack/Issue Ad

  16. Attack Ads • The Norm Rather than the Exception • The Mother of all Attack Ads

  17. The Effect of Attack ads on voters • Some voters become disenchanted and disaffected • Your Base Loves them!

  18. How Effective are these • If they didn’t work, candidates wouldn’t run them • The Lessons of 1988 • The Revolving Door • Willie Horton

  19. 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

  20. 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

  21. How not to deal with them • Do Nothing • If you get Punched in the nose, you must punch back

  22. How the attack can backfire • If you are seen as being too evil

  23. 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

  24. The New Media • Innovative in 2008 • Candidates had a lot to like • They didn’t like the anarchy

  25. Social Media in 2012 • No new Innovations • Obama Retains the social media advantage • More Control • More negative

  26. You have No Friends on Social Media

  27. Changes for the Future

  28. It will Survive The Electoral College

  29. Why No Change • To Difficult to Amend the Constitution • The Fear of Unanticipated Consequences

  30. The Map Favors the Democrats

  31. District Plan • Maine and Nebraska use this system • Popular with the party that Controls the House of Representatives • Could pass without an amendment

  32. National Popular Vote Interstate Compact • Would provide a back door to 538 • Popular after 2000 • Momentum has Slowed • Now largely partisan

  33. Why No Change • Institutional Difficulties • More hits than Misses • Unanticipated Consequences

  34. What of the Primaries and Conventions

  35. The Republicans • Didn’t Like their 2008 Rules • Didn’t Like their 2012 Rules • Will Reevaluate for 2016

  36. The Conventions • The late convention is no longer a financial positive • Low Ratings, Low Excitement • 3 Days and earlier Dates

  37. Big Money • Outcome • Corporations have stayed quiet • Develop new strategies • Big $ likely to stay

  38. Was 2012 part of a realignment?

  39. Short Term Deviations • Congressional Elections • Weaker partisan ties • Poor challengers • These can result in a landslide for one party

  40. How To Wreck a Party Realignments

  41. What is a Realignment • A Durable shift in voting Patterns • The New Party Kills the Old • Majority Parties become minorities

  42. Who Switches in a Realignment • Hard Cores do not switch • Independents do • New Voters • Weak partisans become strong Partisans

  43. What Causes a Realignment • Economic or social crisis • Failure of the party to interpret change • A changed electorate

  44. The Policy Implications • A mandate for change • Major New Policies • Continued electoral success

  45. Options for the Losers • Ignore the issue • Try to absorb it • Change

  46. Good Times A Theory of critical elections

  47. Kinds of Realignments • Secular Realignments- happen over time • Regional Realignments • Critical Elections

  48. VICTORY Defeat same Maintaining Deviating Converting Realigning change Types of Election Majority Party

  49. A Realigning Election • The Actual Critical Election • 1800 • 1860 • 1896 • 1930 • High Intensity • High Turnout

  50. A Maintaining Election • A boring election • The party in power remains in power • 1936, 1940, 1944, 1948, 1960

More Related