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Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008
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Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Dec 29, 2015

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Page 1: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Voting and Elections

3 November, 2008

Page 2: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives

All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233 seats) and

could increase their majority by 20-30 seats. U.S. Senate

35 seats in the U.S. Senate Democrats currently have a 1 seat majority 23 of the contested seats are held by Republicans. Democrats need to pick up 9 seats to stop filibuster

Governors’ Races 11 states

State legislative races Statewide ballot measures

Page 3: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Options for Electing the President Congress chooses the president State legislatures choose the president President elected by popular vote Electoral College

Page 4: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

How it works Each state was allocated a number of Electors equal to the

number of U.S. Senators (always 2) plus the number of U.S. Representatives (which changes)

The manner of choosing the electors was left to the individual state legislators. By 1836 all states (except for South Carolina) choose electors by popular vote (plurality rules).

The candidate with a majority of electoral votes is elected president

In the event that no candidate wins a majority, the U.S. House of Representatives would choose from the top five contenders. Each state could cast only one vote. An absolute majority is required

Page 5: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

The 2000 Presidential ElectionBush 271; Gore 266(270 needed to win)

Page 6: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

The 2004 Presidential ElectionBush 286 EV (51%)/ Kerry 252 EV (48%)270 EV needed to win

A change in Ohio (with 20 electoral votes) would have given Kerry the presidency even though Bush would have received a majority of the popular vote

Page 7: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Unequal Representation

Source: Robert A. Dahl, How Democratic is the American Constitution?

Page 8: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Adjusting for State Population

Page 9: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

The Tracking Polls as of November 3 Obama 51, McCain 44 (DemCorps 10/30=11/2) Obama 51, McCain 43 (NBCWSJ 11/1-2) Obama 52, McCain 42 (Gallup 10/31-11/2) Obama 54, McCain 41 (CBS 10/30-11/1) Obama 54, McCain 43 (ABCPost 10/29-11/1)

Page 10: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Link to CNN map

Page 11: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.
Page 12: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Will Obama have coattails? Typically about 90 percent of House incumbents are

reelected In the Senate, 78.6 percent have won reelection in the

postwar period Even in years very unfavourable to one of the parties, a

large majority win. In 1994, the Democrats worst year since 1946, 84 percent won. In 2006, 87 percent of the Republican incumbents in the House were returned to office.

Page 13: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Congressional Races to Watch Open seats (where no incumbent is running) are typically

the most competitive U.S. Senate (5 seats all held by Republicans); Virginia, New

Mexico, Colorado, Nebraska, Idaho, U.S. House (32 seats); 26 held by Republicans. However,

many of those retiring represent safe Republican districts.

Page 14: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Senate Races to Watch Nevertheless, of the 23 Republican Senate seats, 7 are

competitive; 1 is a tossup (Minnesota); and 3 are leaning Republican (Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi)

Only 1 Democratic seat (Louisiana is competitive) See Map of Senate Races

Page 15: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.
Page 16: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

When the polls close… add 5 hours)

Page 17: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

The Florida Disaster Florida recount (link to Univ. of Chicago study) The punch card voting system Design of the palm beach ballot

Page 18: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

The Butterfly Ballot

Page 19: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Evidence of problems in Palm Beach

Page 20: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Voter Turnout U.S. turnout in comparative perspective Lower for congressional elections than Presidential

elections Decline in voter turnout How low is it? Does it matter? The role of age and education

Page 21: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Turnout in Comparative Perspective

See also Fiorina et al. Table 6.1, p.140

Page 22: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Trends in Voter Turnout

Page 23: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Voting is the most common form of political participation Many people also talk about politics and try to persuade

others to vote Very few participate in any other specific way.

Page 24: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

The U.S. in Comparative Perspective

Source: Comparative Study of Electoral Systems (CSES), Module 2, 2004

Page 25: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.
Page 26: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Why is voter turnout so low? Electoral system Voter attitudes Lack of convenience Difficulty of registration

Page 27: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.
Page 28: Voting and Elections 3 November, 2008. What’s at Stake Presidency House of Representatives All 435 seats Democrats currently have a 15 seat majority (233.

Electoral College How it works

Majority (270) of the 538 electoral votes to win Past results

2004 election (Bush 286/Kerry 251) 2000 election (Bush 271/Gore 266)

States to watch Pollster.com