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CAMPAIGNS, ELECTIONS, AND SUFFRAGE
35

Election Day First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

CAMPAIGNS, ELECTIONS, AND

SUFFRAGE

Page 2: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Election Day

First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day

Page 3: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Electoral College Electoral Votes- votes of the electors (Electoral College) Total number of representatives a state has in the House

of Representatives and the Senate. The total number of electoral votes are 538 (435 in HOR+

100 Senate+ 3 for DC=538 A candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win the

presidency VA has 13; CA 55; NY 29; TX 38; FL 29; RI 3--- a

candidate must campaign harder in large states (states that have a large number of electoral votes because they must get to the 270 needed to win the presidency.

The formal election is when the electors vote. The Monday after the second Wednesday in December.

Page 4: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Popular vote

Popular votes-the People’s vote. The candidate who wins the most votes in a state wins all of the state’s electoral votes

Page 5: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Campaigning

Federal Election Campaign Acts- A presidential candidate can

receive public funding for elections

A limit is set on how much a candidate can spend

Candidates must disclose or record all spending

Page 6: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Campaigning

Political Action Committee (PAC)-organizations that financially support candidates

A PAC can only donate up to $5000 to one candidate

Page 7: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Campaigning

“soft money”—unlimited amounts of money that a group can give to a political party; not to an individual

McCain-Feingold bill—legislation to limit “soft money”

Page 8: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Campaigning

Candidates and the media- the media can give a positive or negative image for candidates.

The first televised debate was in 1960 between Kennedy and Nixon

Page 9: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Campaigning

Undecided voters of the electorate- Electorate- people entitled to vote

Campaigns are aimed towards the undecided voter because they do not know how they will vote.

Page 10: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Electoral College

Article II, Section 1—Established the Electoral College. It provided that each state would choose electors. They would meet and cast votes for two presidential candidates

Page 11: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Electoral College

The Original System—Candidates receiving a majority of the electoral votes would be President. Candidates with the second highest votes would be Vice PresidentProblem—the President and

Vice President could come from different political parties

Page 12: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Electoral College The 12th amendment—

fixed the problem with the original system. Electors would cast separate ballots for President and Vice PresidentPresidential Ticket-

Candidates from a political party run for President & Vice President together

Page 13: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Electoral College

# in Electoral College—538===435(House of Representatives) + 100 (Senators) + 3 (DC)Winning-the Presidential

candidates must have a majority of electoral votes to win—270

Page 14: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Electoral College The Formal Election—

when electors voteMonday after the Second

Wednesday in December at the Capitol Building

January 6—both houses of Congress meet in the House Chamber to count ballots.

Page 15: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Electoral College

Election by the House—if a tie occurs in the Electoral votes or no candidates gets a majority, the House of Representatives votesEach of the 50 states gets

one vote—the candidate with the majority wins

If a tie occurs in the House vote—the Vice President breaks the tie

Page 16: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Electoral College Ideas for reforming the Electoral

College--Voting by districts—candidates receive a

vote for each district won (ex: VA has 11 districts—McCain gets 4 electoral votes for the 4 districts won/Obama gets 7 electoral votes for the 7 districts won. No winner take all)

Proportional voting—candidate wins the percentage of electoral votes based on the % of the popular vote (ex: If Obama won 60% of the electoral vote in VA, then he would get 60% of VA 13 electoral votes and McCain would get 40% of VA’s electoral votes)

Eliminate the Electoral College—the popular vote would determine the president

Page 17: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

SUFFRAGE (THE RIGHT TO VOTE)

BARRIERS

Page 18: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

Before the American Revolution

Blacks, women, and white males who didn’t own property could not vote

Page 19: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

By the Early 1800s

property and religious tests for voting were outlawed

Page 20: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

By the Mid 1800s

all adult males who were white could vote

Page 21: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

1870-15th amendment (no state could deprive any citizen the right to vote on the basis of race)

So many states used other methods to deprive blacks the right to vote:

○Grandfather clause (could not vote, if grandfather had not voted before 1867)

○Literacy tests○Poll tax

Page 22: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

1915- Supreme Court ruled the grandfather clause was unconstitutional

Page 23: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

1919-19th amendment gave women the right to vote

Page 24: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

1965 –Voting Rights Act of 1965, 1970, 1975, 1982

○Ended literacy tests and poll tax (24th amendment)

○Federal government could register voters in districts with less than 50% blacks voting

○Outlawed unfair division of election districts

○Poll watchers○Ballots printed in Spanish

Page 25: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

1971-26th Amendment –lowered the voting age to 18

Page 26: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE VOTING

Page 27: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

1. QUALIFICATIONS

18 YEARS OLD US CITIZEN NOT A CONVICTED FELON (VA) LEGALLY SANE (VA)

Page 28: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

2. WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO REGISTER? ENROLL WITH THE APPROPRIATE

LOCAL AUTHORITY Some states also have residency

requirements. You may have to live in an area for a certain amount of time before voting.

YOU CAN REGISTER AT THE POST OFFICEDMVVOTER REGISTRAR

Page 29: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

3. HOW DO WE VOTE?

WE USE A SECRET BALLOT (AUSTRALIAN BALLOT)

SHOW ID INSERT BALLOT (CARD) MAKE CHOICE -STATES CHOOSE

METHOD OF VOTING (MAY BE ELECTRONIC OR PAPER)

INSERT BALLOT INTO READER GET A “I VOTED” STICKER

Page 30: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

4. What is “The Ticket”? The list of candidates nominated for

political office When voting, voters look at the

Democratic or Republican tickets. Ticket-splitting is voting for candidates

from different parties.

Page 31: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

5. WHAT IF I CANNOT GO TO THE POLLS TO VOTE?

ABSENTEE BALLOTS CAN BE USED W/O GOING TO THE POLLS, BUT ONLY FOROUT OF TOWNHOSPITALIZEDPHYSICALLY

HANDICAPPEDIN JAIL FOR A

MISDEMEANORRELIGIOUS HOLIDAY

Page 32: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

6. FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE HOW WE VOTE. . .

• PERSONAL BACKGROUND– AGE– RACE– GENDER– RELIGION– INCOME– EDUCATION– FAMILY

**cross-pressured voter- one who is caught in conflict between elements in their life

Page 33: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE HOW WE VOTE. . .

LOYALTY TO POLITICAL PARTY --straight party voter—always vote

with their party --Strong party voter--usually vote

with party --weak party voter—sometimes vote

with party (also may be called an independent)

Page 34: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE HOW WE VOTE. . .

Issues-the media keeps us more informed today

Page 35: Election Day  First Tuesday following the first Monday in November- Election Day.

FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE HOW WE VOTE. . .

Image- the candidate should have an image of trust, honesty, and a leader