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Chapter 17: Elections and Voting
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Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

Feb 24, 2016

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Chapter 17: Elections and Voting. Electing the President. To be elected president, a candidate must win 270 of the 538 available electoral votes—a simple majority. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

• Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

Page 2: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

Electing the President• To be elected president, a candidate must win

270 of the 538 available electoral votes—a simple majority.

• The electoral vote is equal to the number of representatives and senators from all the states, plus 3 votes from the District of Columbia.

• Each state’s electoral vote equals the total number of its senators and representatives in Congress.

Page 3: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

Financing Campaigns• Direct donations to candidates or parties also

come from political action committees, or PACs.

• PACs are established by interest groups to raise money to support candidates or parties.

Campaign Spending

Page 4: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

• Expanding the Right to Vote:

1. Women’s Suffrage

2. African-American Suffrage

3. Voting Age

Page 5: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

Woman Suffrage• By 1914, women had won the right to vote

in 11 states.

• Not until after World War I, when the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified, was woman suffrage put into effect nationwide.

Page 6: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

African American Suffrage• Fifteenth Amendment was ratified in 1870

and gave African-American males the right to vote.

• The grandfather clause was incorporated in the constitutions of some Southern states and provided that only voters whose grandfathers had voted before 1867 were eligible to vote without paying a certain tax or passing a literacy test.

Page 7: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

African American Suffrage (cont.)

• Some southern states used the literacy tests to keep African Americans from the polls.

• Another device that was designed to discourage African American suffrage was a poll tax—an amount of money that a citizen had to pay before he or she could vote.

Page 8: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

African American Suffrage (cont.)

• The Voting Rights Act of 1965 empowered the federal government to register voters in any district where less than 50 percent of African American adults were on the voting lists.

Page 9: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

Twenty-sixth Amendment• During the Vietnam War a movement began

to lower the voting age from 21 to 18.

• The Twenty-sixth Amendment lowered the voting age from 21 to 18.

Page 10: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

Profile of Regular Voters• Citizens who vote regularly have certain

positive attitudes toward government and citizenship.

• The more education a citizen has, the more likely it is that he or she will vote.

• Middle-aged citizens have the highest voting turnout of all age groups.

• Voter regularity also increases with income.

Page 11: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting

Profile of Nonvoters• Some citizens do not vote because they

do not meet state voting requirements.

• Complicated registration procedures and residency requirements can also be a barrier to voting.

Page 12: Chapter 17: Elections and Voting
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