2026-03-01
Today: Voting and Elections
We have had early voting, but today is Primary Election Day
Next class: Political Parties
State and local governments
Federal government sets some rules
- Centered on 14th Amendment
- Voting Rights Act
- Help America Vote ActParties 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
- The winner take all aspect accounts for the dominance of two major parties
- If there are a dozen closely matched candidates, the winner may only get 20% of the voteMajority 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 electionsElectoral 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
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 incumbentsIncumbents have name recognition and a record to run on
Incumbents have access to campaign funds from PACs and other sources
To qualify to vote, you must be:
- 18-years-old or older
- U.S. citizen
- Resident of the state of Texas
- To register to vote, you must:
- Register in person or by mail at least 30 days before an election
- At least 17 years and 10 months old on the date your voter registration application is submitted, and 18 years of age on Election Day.
- resident of the county where you submit the application
- not a convicted felon (you may be eligible to vote if you have completed your sentence, probation, and parole)
- not been declared by a court exercising probate jurisdiction to be either totally mentally incapacitated or partially mentally incapacitated without the right to vote.
- Qualified to voteFind your polling place, election dates, early election periods, registration information, sample ballots, official election results
Author: Tom Hanna
Website: tomhanna.me
License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
HCC GOVT2306, Spring 2026, Instructor: Tom Hanna>