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- Electoral politics in the states and localities
- A. Administration of elections
- 1. All elections in the
United States are administered by state and local governments, not by
the national government—thus, great variation
- 2. In most states the
Republican and Democratic parties have a “preferred position”
- 3. States vary in the
difficulty of ballot access for minor parties
- 4. States choose one of two
kinds of ballots
- a. Party column or Indiana
ballot, which encourages party-line voting
- b. Office block or
Massachusetts ballot, which encourages split-ticket voting
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- Party organization and officers, usually prescribed by the state
- 1. Party chair – spokesperson
for the party
- 2. Vice-chair – by state law
or party bylaws generally must be of the opposite gender from the party
chair
- 3. Central committee –
consists of 20 or more persons who are elected or otherwise chosen for
specified terms
- 4.
Executive director - oversees the staff, assists the chair, and
coordinates the work of the central committee and other
party officials
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- 1. Structure for elections
- 2. Candidate recruitment
- 3. Voter registration
- 4. Voter mobilization
- 5. Campaign resources
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- 1. Party identification
- a. Partisanship is the
single most important predictor of the vote
- b. An important element
in elections where most voters have little information about candidates
- 2. Candidate appeal, with
the importance of name identification and the advantages of incumbency
- 3. Issue voting
- a. State elections often focus on
economic conditions, education, jobs, and the environment
- b. However, issues are
less important at the state than at the national level
- 4. Nonpartisan local
elections
- a. Some contend
nonpartisan local elections make it more difficult for poor persons,
minorities, and the less educated to participate effectively
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- 1. Parties in the executive branch
- a. Winning the
governorship is the big prize at the state level
- b. Governors often assist
in recruiting candidates for the state legislature
- 2. Parties in the legislature
- a. Like Congress, state
legislatures (excluding Nebraska) are organized largely along party
lines
- b. Redistricting or
reapportionment is one area on which legislatures are predictably
partisan
- 3. Parties in the judiciary
- a. Where judges are
elected on party ballots, partisanship is important
- b. Party matters less in
states that select judges on nonpartisanship ballots and in retention
elections
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- 1. The main objectives of the urban reform movement in the early
twentieth century was to overthrow political machines, and this was
accomplished
- 2. Political parties are still
important in the politics of many cities, although they are much weaker
today
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- 1. State politics may be
classified according to how the parties share public offices
- a. Two-party state
- b. Modified one-party state
- c. One-party state
- 1. Since the end of World
War II, there has been a trend toward two-party competition
- 2. Consequences of an
even party balance
- a. Parties and candidates are more sensitive to slight changes in public
opinion
- b. More teamwork and efficiency in government as leaders within each
party work together
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- a. Competition occurs within the majority party in the primary,
disorganizing the dominant party
- b. Pulverizes the minority party, causing it to focus on national
politics and patronage
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- A. U.S. has large number and variety of elections compared to Europe
- B. Differences in state election
systems
- 1. Who may vote
- a. States can limit
suffrage; for example, most states do not permit prison inmates to vote
- b. States differ in voter
registration rules
- 2. Reform of election laws
- a. Elections by mail: fear
of fraud, hope for higher turnout
- b. Absentee ballots: can
loosen requirements to encourage turnout
- c. Early voting
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- a. State law establishes the process by which party nominees are
selected: primary, caucus, or
convention system
- b. States have different
approaches to primaries
- 1. Closed primary - only
those voters registered in a party may vote in that party’s primary
- 2. Open primary - any voter
can participate in any party’s primary on primary election day
- 3. Blanket primary – can
vote for more than one party in same primary election
- c. Caucuses or conventions used in a few states (e.g., Iowa) – emphasize
candidate organizational
efforts
- d. Louisiana system – all
candidates from all parties in a single election; runoff to determine
winner
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- a. States consolidate
gubernatorial and state general elections of the first Tuesday after the
first Monday in November
- b. There is great variability in
the timing of state and local primary elections and local general
elections
- c. State law establishes the
rules for local elections but often allows cities and towns some
discretion in setting the
precise dates
- d. State and local governments can call special elections to vote on a
ballot initiative, a statewide constitutional change, a
new constitution, or to replace a U.S. senator who has died or resigned
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- 1. States vary significantly in turnout rates
- a. Definition: turnout as proportion of voting age
population that votes
- b. Can’t use
registration rates for turnout due to state variation in procedures
- 2. Low primary vote raises
concerns for representativeness of primary electorate
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- 1. Disclosure is a common element of campaign finance legislation at the
state and local level
- 2. About two-thirds of the states have enacted campaign finance reforms
that limit individual contributions; some states provide a form of
public financing
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- 1. With voter volatility, voting
is influenced heavily by campaign spending
- 2. Big spending in some initiative campaigns by special interests,
due to national implications
- 3. Voting choices on ballot questions is different because of lack
of simplifying factors such as parties and candidate appeal
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- A. Steps in the renewal of political parties
- 1. Change image of
political parties and persuade citizens that partisan activity is
essential to a healthy constitutional democracy
- 2. Give people who support
parties a greater say in choosing the candidates who run under their
party’s label
- B. Make elections more “voter friendly”
- C. Challenge of getting good people to run for office
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