1 / 10

The Election Process

The Election Process. Chapter 7 (shortened as we’ve already done the elections…). Different Types of Direct Primaries. Direct primary – intraparty election Held within party to pick candidates Most states now use this, required for Federal spots Some states allow conventions to pick

paulos
Télécharger la présentation

The Election Process

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Election Process Chapter 7 (shortened as we’ve already done the elections…)

  2. Different Types of Direct Primaries • Direct primary – intraparty election • Held within party to pick candidates • Most states now use this, required for Federal spots • Some states allow conventions to pick • Two types of Direct primaries • Closed Primaries – only declared party members vote • 25 states use this including PA • Open Primaries – any qualified voter can vote to nominate • May only participate in either the Republican & Democratic one • 3 states now use a blanket primary – wide open primary

  3. Few more thoughts on nominations • Runoff primary – 8 states require the nominee to win an absolute majority of votes to be picked; runoff primary happens if this does not occur the 1st time – only top two vote getters • (most states only require a plurality) • Nonpartisan elections – candidates not identified by party affiliation • Usually for local races – school boards, etc. • Petition – used widely in local elections – candidates submit petition to be nominated as a candidate

  4. Election rules – most are State rules • Some are federal rules… • Election Date • Federal Election Commission • Secret ballots • Help America Vote Act, 2002 • Eliminated punch card voting, improve training of election workers, centralize voter registration systems & provide for provisional ballots

  5. Voting itself… • Early voting v. absentee voting • The Precinct assigns polling places, oversees election, authorizes poll watchers • Types of ballots –Sample ballots • From Australian ballots = office –group ballot or party column ballot • Bed sheet ballots  ballot fatigue issue • Automated voting & electronic vote counting OK’d • online voting being discussed & used in some situations • Coattail effect

  6. Sources of Funding for Elections • Small contributors – regular people who contribute about $5 or 10 to a campaign (10% of pop.) • Wealthy folks – “fat cats” – large donors • Candidates themselves • PACs – political action committees • “super PACs” – since Citizens United v. FEC, 2010 • Fundraisers • Temporary organizations to work for candidates; Internet • Subsidies from state & federal gov’ts

  7. Federal Election Commission (FEC) • Administers all laws for campaign finances • Timely disclosure of campaign finance data • Must have single campaign committee to collect & spend $$ • Anything over $200 must be identified by source/ who & date • Not allowed: donations in name of another, cash over $100, $ from foreign sources • $ over $5K must be reported to SEC w/in 48 hours • In last 20 days of campaign $1K must also be reported

  8. FEC: place limits on Contributions • Individual max of $2600 to candidate for primary & general elections; plus max of $5K to a PAC; & max of $32,400 to the national party • Total max of $123,200 every two year election cycle • Most PACs are affiliated w/ companies, unions, trade or health organizations – connected PACs • Non-connected PACs – single issue or ideological PAC • ***Now, no limits on $$ to super PACs***

  9. More… • Place limits on campaign expenditures • Cap on spending of presidential campaigns that accept FEC subsidies for campaigning • Provide public funding for parts of the presidential election process • Presidential Election Campaign Fund – on tax forms • Offered to assist in campaign & convention • If accepted, then spending limits & other rules apply • In 2012, neither candidate used funds, but both parties did for their national conventions

  10. Hard money vs. Soft money • Hard money - $ donated directly to candidates’ campaigns – it can be tracked & accounted for • Soft money - $ given to political parties, PACs, or other organizations for “party building activities” • Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, 2002 - BCRA • Aka – McCain- Feingold Law • Banned soft money to political parties • Has led to “other political organizations” to be created & referred to as “527s” – part of tax code for their exemption • Requires advertisements to be identified as to who paid for it

More Related