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Voting and Elections

Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

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Page 1: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Voting and Elections

Page 2: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Voting Limitations in Early America

• Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election.

• The right to vote is subject to regulations and restrictions.

• Until the first half of the 1800s, voting was generally limited to white, property-owning men.

• After the Constitution was adopted, states had their own voting rules.

• In the early 1800s, state legislatures abolished property and religious requirements.

Page 3: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

African American Suffrage

• Initially, no enslaved persons and few free African Americans could vote.

• The Fifteenth Amendment provided the first federal voting rules required of the states.

• The grandfather clause and literacy tests were designed to disenfranchise African American voters.

• Use of a poll tax in national elections was outlawed by the Twenty-fourth Amendment.

• The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was broadened by voting rights laws in 1970, 1975, and 1982.

Page 4: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Suffrage for Women and Youth

• Women began an organized fight for suffrage in the mid- 1800s.

• By 1914, eleven western states allowed women to vote.

• The Nineteenth Amendment granted women suffrage on the national level.

• The Twenty-sixth Amendment, ratified in 1971, lowered the voting age to 18

Page 5: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

The Structure of Elections

• Election cycles, term limits, and ballot issues all influence voter choices at the polls.

• Federal election cycles are determined by the term lengths set out in the Constitution.

• The federal election cycle ensures that the entire government will not turn over at the same time.

• Some, but not all, federal and state positions have term limits.

• In many states, citizens vote on legislative referendums, popular referendums, and initiatives.

Page 6: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Voters’ Election Choices

• Voters’ personal backgrounds affect their decisions.

• Voters are also influenced by loyalty, or lack of loyalty, to a political party.

• Voters look for a variety of qualifications in candidates for office.

• Voters are typically most concerned with issues that directly affect them.

Page 7: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Voter Participation

• Voter participation in the U.S. is low compared to many other democracies around the world.

• Many citizens do not vote because of registration practices or little party involvement.

• Voter turnout is impacted by the sheer number of elections and new requirements for voting.

• Citizens who vote regularly have positive attitudes toward government and citizenship.

• A number of reforms are being considered to make voting more convenient.

Page 8: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Campaign Strategies

• A campaign manager is responsible for the overall strategy and planning in a campaign.

• A large election campaign expenditure is advertising, much of which is propaganda.

• Television is the most important communication tool for a presidential candidate.

• Social media can be a powerful and cost-effective campaign tool

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Page 10: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Campaign Finance

• Efforts to regulate money in campaigns are controversial.

• Limits on campaign spending and donations can be seen as limits on free speech.

• Presidential candidates who receive public funds must limit the amount spent by their campaign.

• Direct funding, or hard money, comes from contributions made directly to a candidate.

• Indirect funding, or soft money, comes from organizations independent from a campaign.

Page 11: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Which group spends the most and why?

Page 12: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

What is the goal of this poster?

Page 13: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Voter Qualifications and Voter Registration

• States require U.S. citizenship and some period of state residence in order to vote.

• To vote, one must first be registered, or enrolled with the local government.

• Registration is required to prevent voter fraud.

• You must complete a registration form in order to become eligible to vote.

• Political parties and nonpartisan groups help people register to vote

Page 14: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Voting

• Voting in the United States is optional, but it is an important part of democracy.

• Voters should be informed about the issues and candidates that will be on the ballot.

• Voters are assigned a polling place within their precinct and near their residence.

• Voting procedures and ballots vary from state to state, and voters are entitled to assistance.

• When the polls close, the ballots are forwarded to the local canvassing board for counting

Page 15: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

The Power to Set Voting Qualifications

• 5 Restrictions placed on States• Each state must allow eligible voters to vote in all elections within

the state

• No state can deprive a person the right to vote because of race

• No state can deprive a person the right to vote on account of gender

• No state can require the payment of a poll tax

• No state can deprive a person over the age of 18 the right to vote because of age.

Page 16: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Voter Qualifications

• 3 factors used to determine voter eligibility• Citizenship

• Residence

• Important to keep political machines from importing enough outsiders to affect the outcome of the election and to ensure that every voter has at least some time in which to become familiar with the candidates and issues in an election.

• Age

Page 17: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Civil Rights Legislation

• Civil Rights Act of 1957• Set up the U.S. Civil Rights Commission to check into claims of

voter discrimination, gave the attorney general authority to prevent interference with any person’s right to vote in a federal election

• Civil Rights of 1960• Added an additional safeguard by allowing the appointment of

federal voting referees when voter discrimination is uncovered

Page 18: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Legislation (cont.)

• Civil Rights Act of 1964• Broader and more effective than its predecessors.

• Outlaws discrimination in several areas, especially job related matters

• Forbids the use of any voter registration or literacy requirement in an unfair or discriminatory manner and makes violation a federal offence

• Voting Rights Act of 1965• Made the 15th amendment a truly effective part of the Constitution

• Applied to all elections held anywhere in the country

Page 19: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Voter Behavior

• In the 2000 election 205.8 million Americans were eligible to vote• Only 105.4 million (51.2%) actually voted for president

• Only 99 million (48%) voted for U.S. Representative

• In the 1998 off-year election, only 66,033 (33.9%) voted for U.S. Representative

Page 20: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Why People Don’t Vote• “cannot vote” nonvoters (20 million)• Resident aliens

• Ill or physically cannot make it to the polls

• Traveling out of country unexpectedly

• People in mental health care facilities

• In jail or prison

• Religious nonvoters

• Actual nonvoters (80 million)• People deliberately choose not to vote

• Convinced it makes no real difference who wins

• Satisfaction

• Distrust of politics and politicians

• Lack of political efficacy (lack of any sense of their own influence or effectiveness in politics.)

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Factors Affecting Turnout

• Complicated election procedures

• Inconvenient registration requirements

• Long ballots

• Long lines at polling places

• Bad weather

• Time-zone Fallout• Because polls have closed in the east and central time-zones, a winner may

be declared before some people vote in the mountain and pacific zones

• Lack of Interest

Page 22: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Who Votes?

• The people most likely to vote:• Display such characteristics as higher levels of income, education,

and occupational status.

• They are well-integrated into community life, long-time residents, who are active and comfortable in their surroundings

• Strong party identification, and believe voting is important

• Women are more likely to vote than men

Page 23: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Who Doesn’t Vote?

• People are less likely to vote if:• They are younger than 35, unmarried, and unskilled

• They live in the South and in rural areas

Page 24: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Sociological Factors

• Political Socialization is the process by which people come to believe what they believe about politics• Factors that influence voting behavior

• Income, occupation (higher income – Republican)

• Education (more education – Republican, however, education make you more liberal)

• Gender, Age (women, young people – Democrat)

• Religion (Protestants – Republican, Catholics, Jews – Democrat)

• Geography (South/Midwest – Republican, Northeast/West – Democrat)

• Family (You vote the way your parents voted)

Page 25: Voting and Elections. Voting Limitations in Early America Voting is making a choice among alternatives in an election. The right to vote is subject to

Psychological Factors• A strong party identification is the single most significant and lasting predictor of how a person will vote.• Straight-ticket voting – voting for candidates of

only one party in an election

• Split-ticket voting – voting for candidates of more than one party in the same election

• The impression a candidate makes on the voters can have an impact on how they will vote

• The role of issues are especially important in presidential elections, people care about the things that effect them most.