diff options
| author | Holden Rohrer <hr@hrhr.dev> | 2020-11-07 00:24:06 -0500 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Holden Rohrer <hr@hrhr.dev> | 2020-11-07 00:24:06 -0500 | 
| commit | 406da5e66da599d0aca74e7bc9b57e508659b345 (patch) | |
| tree | 0d476989ea333d0b761cc5b5bf82369dfa61efb4 | |
| parent | e79ea15d195f0faf6076f3392ab155e47b931261 (diff) | |
added turnout and general elections notes
| -rw-r--r-- | rich/27_elections | 104 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | rich/29_turnout | 87 | 
2 files changed, 191 insertions, 0 deletions
| diff --git a/rich/27_elections b/rich/27_elections index 7c9151f..f1f98d7 100644 --- a/rich/27_elections +++ b/rich/27_elections @@ -55,3 +55,107 @@ How did it develop over time?          - Also have to make those in power (men) care about the issue              - Women boycott domestic work          - Well-timed, uses WWI. 19th Amendment 1920 +- The black vote is very important for Democrats. +- Women are a really big "swing" constituency, but is less monolithic +  and more regional. + +Who runs for office? +- Two types +1) Self-starters = independent | not supported by party est. +    - to gain publicity (for a non-political career) +    - ex: possibly Trump, Mary Kerry for gov of CA +    - specific policy issues +    - political cause (not single-issue but a focus like Green Party) +    - usually not a national election; state or regional +2) Recruited (by the party) Candidates +    - chosen based on "particular qualities" (electability) +        - ex: funding +            - either from the people---small-dollar donations for a +              compelling story +            - large-dollar donations for policy quality (often from +              corporate/wealthy interests) +        - past success like Trump being a great shuckster (built brand) + +What is the modern campaign like? +- Used to be super personal, even 40--50 years ago. +    - Candidates would go around, shake hands, etc +- "Cyclical dependence on contributions" +    - Campaign costs have increased severely +        - Every dollar counts because high cost of failure +        - Tens of millions for House races, billions for pres. +- The Rise of "Political Consultants" +    - Devise a campaign image OR a strategy +        - Image = what the voter sees, messaging +            - Also check viability for a candidate +            - Polling based on "how does this sound" +            - Case studies of "can this candidate win the election" +        - Strategy +            - How to win +    - "Your role is to get fired" +    - Often expensive: $300--700/hr + +Running for President +Stage 1 - Primaries +    - Closed primary = only members registered to the political party +      can participate in the vote +    - Open primary = voters can choose party primary to vote in but can +      only choose one +        - Vast majority of primaries are this kind +        - Georgia's primary +            - Has runoff for non-majority primary, requiring you to have +              originally voted in that primary +    - Blanket primary +        - Can vote in either or BOTH primaries +        - No state uses a pure form of blanket primary +        - Ruled unconstitutional in 2000 for California +            - Parties were forced to put candidates on ballot that they +              didn't endorse +- Alternative: Caucus method +    - Completely different from a primary +    - Iowa caucus +    - Iowans care more about their vote +    - Candidates are very personal, and since Iowa's pretty small; +      candidates will actually visit every county +    - Each town organizes a group of people together in one physical +      location, like a high school gym. +        - Grouped by which candidate you will vote for. +        - Then people campaign to each other to move people around until +          candidates pass a certain threshold number of suporters. +        - A proportional representation is sent to the state caucus +        - Long, drawn-out, time-consuming discussions +- Conventions: after either system, this is like a "coronation party" +  for the nominee. + +The Electoral College +Stage 2 +Article II, Sec 1; Amendments 12 and 23 +- Four noble and not-so-noble reasons +    - So that we know who actually wins, like pluralities can't be +      disputed +    - Ensure that everyone is actually represented +    - Avoid "tyranny of the majority" +        - States and federalism is important to the US +        - Against "one person, one vote" +    - Popular vote may have prevented the South from actually joining +      the nation +        - North had a greater population, and slaves didn't vote, but +          South wanted sufficient power to join +        - For first 36yrs, pres. was from Virginia +- Makes turnout really important + +Technicalities +- Ballots are an important consideration for electoral outcomes (like +  modern argument over absentee ballots) +    - All ballots are "Australian [secret] ballot" +    - Office-block ballot: grouped by electoral office +        - Multiple parties could claim a candidate for a party +        - Can be a bit trickier, more complicated +        - Greater emphasis on candidates than people (party affiliation +          still there) +        - WAY more common +    - Party column ballot: grouped by party +- Voting by mail +    - Increases participation +    - Changes the real end date of the election +    - In case you can't get home or are out-of-district on voting day(s) +    - Not built to handle pandemics diff --git a/rich/29_turnout b/rich/29_turnout new file mode 100644 index 0000000..267c35a --- /dev/null +++ b/rich/29_turnout @@ -0,0 +1,87 @@ +Turnout is critical to the health of a democracy +- Democracy = policies are representative of the people +- So how healthy is the US? +1996 48.4% +2000 50.7% +2004 55.7% +2008 58.2% +2012 54.9% +2016 55.5% +- That's low, the second lowest of all industrialized democracies +    - And the lowest, Switzerland, doesn't actually have important +      national elections +- What explains participation? + +The Decision to Vote or Not (real Political Science) +- Socioeconomic factors +    - Age: older people are more likely to vote +        - 18--21: less than 1 in 3 chance of voting +        - >21: 54% +    - Education: education increases voting +        - College educated people are way more likely to vote +    - Minority status is a poor factor for understanding US voting +        - Sometimes better for less free democracies +    - Income +        - More money -> more likely to be salaried -> more flexible hrs +    - Actually pretty poor explanatory variables     +        - Correlate with eachother +        - Determine individual voting, not actual group participation +        - National turnout is a group behavior +- Motivational factors +    - Catch-all category, in a way +    - Satisfaction theory: people aren't dissatisfied with the system +        - Voter turnout hasn't increased as distrust has increased +        - The least satisfied are actually the least likely to vote +          (wealthy, high education, older should be MORE satisfied) +        - Doesn't really work +    - Modern Campaigns' influence +        - Actually explains some voter turnout +        - Voters don't like "negative campaigns" and too political +          atmosphere, so they don't vote +        - But it's not enough because it was just as loud 100 years ago +    - "Social Rootedness" +        - Around 60 years ago, you would grow up, go to college, work, +          live, and die in your community. +        - Rootedness -> care about your community +        - Has decreased a lot, corresponding with a decrease in turnout +        - Doesn't fully explain spikes in voter turnout +    - Cultural factor? +        - Well, Americans like politics; political shows are super +          popular. #1 show on TV is Fox News. +        - No real measurement, almost undisproveable (pseudoscientific) +- Institutional factors  +        - Formal or informal, control the cost vs benefit and structure +          of voting +        - Actually establish who gets to play +    - Structure of political competition +        - How districts are organized and representation is decided +        - US = winner-take-all, single-member districts +            - Promotes single competitive districts, low party +              representation +    - Proportionality +        - How # of votes received transforms into # of seats awarded +        - The less proportional, the lower the turnout +            - Parliament, ex. has higher turnout than US +            - "my guy is going to {win,lose} anyway" (esp 3rd parties) +    - Number of Parties (party competition) +        - One argument goes this way: people outside the main parties +          (like a communist more extreme than Dems or a fascist more +          extreme than Reps) +            - But people often vote strategically +    - Unicameralism +        - One chamber -> more turnout +        - "A second source of competition" +            - Lower tournout on non-presidential, non-senate years +        - Statistically significant, but 2-3 percentage points +    - Registration process +        - Has improved a LOT in recent years +    - Mandatory voting +        - Neutralizes most of the cost of voting +        - #1 institutional variable +        - Still small penalties, even in compulsory voting states (ex. +          Australia) +            - Like doctor's note will get you out even +        - Italy puts you on a list +    - Electoral Format +        - Plurality/majoritarian vs proportional +        - Proportional improves turnout | 
