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Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors

Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors. Chapter 6: Public Opinion and Political Action Chapter 9: Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 10: Elections and Voting Behavior. Civic Virtue and Participation. How Can Someone Participate?. Conventional Voting Campaigns Contacting elected officials

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Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors

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  1. Unit 2: Political Beliefs and Behaviors Chapter 6: Public Opinion and Political Action Chapter 9: Nominations and Campaigns Chapter 10: Elections and Voting Behavior

  2. Civic Virtue and Participation

  3. How Can Someone Participate? • Conventional • Voting • Campaigns • Contacting elected officials • Unconventional • Protest • Civil Disobedience • Boycotts

  4. Political Behaviors

  5. How Political Socialization and other Factors Influence Opinion Formation • Political Socialization • The process through which an individual acquires particular political orientations • The learning process by which people acquire their political beliefs and values

  6. Why do People Vote? • Political Efficacy • Civic Duty • Voter Registration • Motor Voter Act-1993

  7. Agents of Socialization • Family • School and Peers • Mass Media • Religious Beliefs • Race and Ethnicity • Gender • Age • Region

  8. How Americans Learn About Politics: Political Socialization

  9. Political Polling

  10. Changes in Eligible Voting Population

  11. Who Votes

  12. What are the Barriers?

  13. Issue Voting vs. Candidate Voting Liberal Conservative

  14. Retrospective Voting What have you done for me lately?

  15. Decline in Voter Turnout

  16. Political Knowledge • Political knowledge and political participation have a reciprocal relationship. • Level of knowledge about history and politics low • Hurts Americans’ understanding of current political events • Geographically illiterate • Gender differences

  17. Causes of the Decline in Voter Turnout Reading-Why voter turnout has declined Bowling Alone

  18. Elections

  19. Winner Take All vs. Proportional Single Member Congressional Districts

  20. Types of Elections Primaries/Caucuses General Referendums Initiatives Recall

  21. The Party Organizations • The 50 State Party Systems • Closed primaries: Only people who have registered with the party can vote for that party’s candidates. • Open primaries: Voters decide on Election Day whether they want to vote in the Democrat or Republican primary. • Blanket primaries: Voters are presented with a list of candidates from all parties. • State parties are better organized in terms of headquarters and budgets than they used to be.

  22. Primaries v. Caucuses • Over years, trend has been to use primaries rather than caucuses to choose delegates • Caucus is the oldest, most party-oriented method of choosing delegates to the national conventions • Arguments for primaries • More democratic • More representative • A rigorous test for the candidate • Arguments for caucuses • Caucus participants more informed; more interactive and informative • Unfair scheduling affects outcomes • Frontloading (being first in the primary calendar) gives some primary states an advantage • Frontloading is the tendency to choose an early date on the primary schedule

  23. Superdelegates • Delegate slot to the Democratic Party’s national convention that is reserved for an elected party official • Some rules originating in Democratic Party have been enacted as state laws thus applying them to the Republican Party as well.

  24. Presidential Elections

  25. The Electoral College

  26. The Electoral College

  27. Realignment • Party Realignment • Critical • Deviling (blip) • Reinstating • Maintaining • Critical Elections • Secular Realignment • Reading-V.O. Theory of Political Realignment

  28. Congressional Elections Incumbency Presidential Coattails Redistricting Gerrymandering

  29. The American People • The Regional Shift • Population shift from east to west • Reapportionment: the process of reallocating seats in the House of Representatives every 10 years on the basis of the results of the census

  30. Midterm Elections

  31. Campaigns

  32. Sources of Political Contributions • Political money regulated by the federal government can come from • Individual Contributions • Political Action Committee Contributions • Political Party Contributions • Member-to-Candidate Contributions • Candidates’ Personal Contributions • Public Funds • Donations from the general tax revenues to the campaigns of qualifying presidential candidates • Matching funds • Availability

  33. Money and Campaigning • The Maze of Campaign Finance Reforms • Federal Election Campaign Act (1974) • Created the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to administer campaign finance laws for federal elections • Created the Presidential Election Campaign Fund • Provided partial public financing for presidential primaries • Matching funds: Contributions of up to $250 are matched for candidates who meet conditions, such as limiting spending. • Provided full public financing for major party candidates in the general election • Required full disclosure and limited contributions

  34. Money and Campaigning • The Maze of Campaign Finance Reforms • Soft Money: political contributions (not subject to contribution limits) earmarked for party-building expenses or generic party advertising • The McCain-Feingold Act (2002) banned soft money, increased amount of individual contributions, and limited “issue ads.” • 527s: independent groups that seek to influence political process but are not subject to contribution restricts because they do not directly seek election of particular candidates

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