2024-10-20
Today
1. Announcements
2. Elections and political parties
Wednesday
1. Finish Elections and political parties
2. Short review for Exam 2
Why do we care about public opinion?
- Our democracy is a consensual democracy, not a majoritiarian democracy
- Everyone is entitled to representation, not just the winners of elections
- Public opinion is a barometer of the health of our democracy
Is the US a democracy? Yes
- It is a representative democracy, not a direct democracy
- It is a consensual democracy, not a majoritarian democracy
- The rights of political minorities matter
Is the US a republic? Yes
- Simple: not a monarchy
- More complex: res publica, the public thing
- The people own the government not vice versa
- This also means that all the people own the government, not that the majority own the minority
“As we do every time this year, Presidents and Prime Ministers converge on this great city to advance important work. But as leaders, we are not the most important people here today. It is the civil society leaders who, in many ways, are going to have the more lasting impact, because as the saying goes, the most important title is not president or prime minister; the most important title is citizen.”
Elections matter
The type of elections matter, too
- not just majoritarian
- the way we handle elections takes rights of political minorities into account
- If the stakes of elections are too high, consent of the minority is threatened
Who ran elections in the Colonial era?
Who ran elections in the Colonial era?
Who ran elections in the early Republic (1776 to 1789)?
Who ran elections in the Colonial era?
Who ran elections in the early Republic (1776 to 1789)?
What powers over elections did the Constitution give to Congress?
If the national government runs elections, what option do the citizens have if the national government becomes tyrannical?
If the state governments run elections and maintain that power, what option do the citizens have if the national government becomes tyrannical?
State and local governments
Federal government sets some rules
- Centered on 14th Amendment
- Voting Rights Act
- Help America Vote Act
Parties also play a role in primary elections, caucuses, and conventions
Plurality system
- First-past-the-post system
- Winner-take-all system
- Common in the United States
- Big contributor to two major party dominance
- If there are a dozen closely matched candidates, the winner may only get 20% of the vote
Majority system: candidate must win 50% + 1 vote
Runoff election: if no candidate wins majority, top two candidates face off in a second election
Ranked choice voting / instant runoff voting
- voters rank candidates in order of preference
- Uncommon now but used in the past in some major cities
- Now used in Maine and Alaska for federal elections
An organized group of people with broadly common interests who seek to win and hold public office in order to influence public policy.
Parties are private organizations: organized group of people
Parties have broadly common interests
Who decides what those interests are?
The parties decide: Parties have freedom of association
If parties are private organizations with freedom of association and the ability to set their own interests, what is the role of the courts in party rules?
With only rare exceptions, party rules are not subject to judicial review
Select the parties nominees for the general election
- Closed primary
- Open primary
- Blanket primary
- Jungle primary / Top two primary / Louisiana primary
- Caucus
Held every four years
Delegates are elected in the state primaries and caucuses
- Delegates are pledged to support a candidate
- Delegates select the party’s nominee for president
- Delegates also draft the party platform
- Usually a formality
- In the past, conventions were more important
Rules set by party National Committees
Superdelegate
- party leader or elected official who is automatically a delegate
- not pledged to support a candidate
- can vote for any candidate
- out of total delegates
2024:
- 747 superdelegates
- 3,949 pledged delegates
- 4,696 total delegates
Superdelegates helped defeat Independent Bernie Sanders in 2016
- Sanders won the most pledged delegates
- Hillary Clinton won the most superdelegates
- Clinton won the nomination
Superdelegates are not used in the Republican Party
Former Democrat and Reform Party Member Donald Trump won the Republican nomination in 2016
- took over the Republican Party from the outside
- getting a plurality in primaries (most votes but less than 50%)
- won a plurality of primaries (not a majority)
- No superdelegates existed to defend the GOP against the hostile takeover by a non-Republican
Electoral College
- Indirect election
- Candidate names are on the ballot
- We elected Electors pledged to those candidates
- Electors meet in December to cast their votes
- Congress counts the Electoral College votes in January
Indirect election of the chief executive is not unique to the United States
- The Electoral College is unique to the United States
- Most democracies are parliamentary systems where the chief executive is chosen by the legislature
- The Electoral College is a compromise between direct election and election by the legislature
- Preserves federalism and the power of the states
- Preserves the Separation of Powers (Congress role is extremely limited)
Campaigns are long and expensive
Campaigns are run by professional staff
Campaigns are media-driven
Expensive campaigns favor incumbents over challengers
- incumbents: current officeholders
- challengers: candidates running against incumbents
Incumbents have name recognition and a record to run on
Incumbents have access to campaign funds from PACs and other sources
Campaign Finance Legal Framework
- Goes back to 1867
- Federal Election Campaign Act (1971)
- Federal Election Commission (1974)
- Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (2002)
Free speech issues (important cases)
- Citizens United v. FEC (2010)
- McCutcheon v. FEC (2014)
Campaign finance entities
- Campaign committees
- Political Action Committees (PACs)
- Super PACs
- 501(c)(4) committees (IRS designation for a type of nonprofit social welfare organization)
Material: Unit 2
- Chapter 5: Civil Rights *
- Chapter 6: Public Opinion
- Chapter 7: The Media and Political Information
- Chapter 8: Participation and Voting
- Chapter 9: Political Parties
- Chapter 10: Campaigns and Elections
Review Material
- Inquizitives: Continue doing them until you are confident (Similar questions)
- Flash Cards in Module 2
- Practice Exam in Exam 2 Module (Exact questions)
Chapter 5: Civil Rights
- Violent versus nonviolent protest
- Equal Pay Act of 1963 (gender)
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Gender)
- Voting Rights Act of 1965
- Civil Rights Act of 1968 (Fair Housing Act)
- Equal Rights Amendment
- Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (gender)
- Americans With Disabilities Act
Chapter 6: Public Opinion
- What is public opinion?
- Why does public opinion matter?
- How is it measured?
Chapters 7: The Media and Political Information
- Disinformation and Misinformation (early lecture material)
- What is the media?
- What is the role of the media in a democracy?
- What is the role of the media in politics?
- What is the role of the media in political campaigns?
- What is the role of the media in public opinion?
- What is the role of the media in political participation?
- What is the role of the media in voting?
Chapter 8: Participation and Voting
- What is political participation?
- What is voting?
- What is the history of voting rights in the United States?
- What are the types of elections?
- What are the types of primaries?
- What are the types of general elections?
- What are the types of special elections?
- What are party conventions?
- What are the rules for the Democratic and Republican conventions?
- What is the Electoral College?
- What are election campaigns?
- What is campaign finance?
- What are the issues with campaign finance?
Chapter 9: Political Parties
- What is a political party?
- What are the functions of political parties?
- What are the types of political parties?
- What are the roles of political parties?
- What are the party systems in the United States?
Chapter 10: Campaigns and Elections
- What are the types of elections?
- What are the types of primaries?
- What are the types of general elections?
- What are the types of special elections?
- What are party conventions?
- What are the rules for the Democratic and Republican conventions?
- What is the Electoral College?
- What are election campaigns?
- What is campaign finance?
- What are the issues with campaign finance?
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Author: Tom Hanna
Website: tomhanna.me
License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
GOVT2306, Fall 2024, Instructor: Tom Hanna