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Chapter 26 (1) Elections and Parties in Texas The roles of parties and interests • Interest groups and political parties are able to foster citizen participation in politics. • Do political parties represent the interests of citizens or have they hindered “…the state’s ability to keep pace with today’s rapid changes”? Challenges to Democratic Party One-Partyism • The ”Know-Nothing” party of the 1850s influenced Texas politics enough to force the Democratic Party to fully organize. • Bitterness among Texans during the Reconstruction era was aimed at the Republican Party. • The Democrats dominated Texas politics for many decades after Reconstruction. • The biggest challenges to the Democrats came from the Greenback Party and, most importantly, the Populists or “Peoples Party” of the 1880s and 1890s. Challenges to Democratic Party One-Partyism • The Progressives sought political reforms to weaken the influence of party machines, and the Prohibition-era issue of banishing alcohol invigorated churches, evangelicals, and women’s groups. • Much of the Progressive agenda was absorbed by the Democrats. • The Republican Party was very slow to develop for several decades. Great Depression & WWII • Republican Party suffered major setbacks • President Hoover and Republicans blamed for Great Depression • 1952 TX Democratic Party officially supported Republican Candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower • 1st time in history that a Republican Presidential Candidate carried the state. Challenges to Democratic Party One-Partyism • The Democratic Party led the nation in civil rights in the 1960s after often supporting segregation and racism, especially in the South, since Reconstruction. • Civil rights issues began to split the Democratic Party of Texas and the southern states. • The Republicans broke Democratic Party dominance with the election of John Tower to the U.S. Senate in a 1961 special election to fill the vacated L.B.J. seat when Johnson became vice-president. Challenges to Democratic Party One-Partyism • The once solid Democratic South transitioned into the heavily Republican South in the latter part of the 20th century, and Texas was no exception. • The Republican Party now dominates all of the elections and holds each of the statewide offices even as citizens’ participation in primaries weakens. • “With 3.9 percent of eligible citizens selecting the Republican nominees that are almost certain to win statewide office it appears that the parties are not creating the broad participation and healthy competition that the state needs to help it respond to changes.” Election Theories and Party Functions • The Responsible Party Model • Electoral Competition Model FUNCTIONS: • Parties recruit candidates. • Parties support candidates by providing logistical support and campaign staff training as well as cash contributions and advertising. • Parties mobilize voters. • The general one-party nature of Texas elections moving from Democratic Party dominance to Republican dominance has diminished healthy twoparty competition. Party Organizations • Temporary party organizations are gatherings, such as primaries, caucuses, and conventions, at which ordinary party members meet. • Examples include the precinct convention, county or senatorial district conventions, and the state party convention. • The first convention, the precinct convention, begins at the close of the polls on primary election night. • “Primaries have been part of Texas elections since the Terrell Election Law in 1905 mandated that major political parties use primaries to select their nominees.” Party Organizations • Permanent party organizations - the party officials selected by the temporary organizations to conduct party business between the primaries, caucuses, and conventions. – The state party chair – The state executive committee - By law, the committee consists of one man and one woman from each state senatorial district. Party officials are rivaled by elected officials of their party. Party Organizations Selecting Delegates • “Today, while the party conventions select which individuals will be sent to the party’s national convention as delegates, the allocation of these delegates between the competing candidates for president is determined by party rules which use voting in the presidential preference primary to allocate candidates on a district-wide or statewide basis.” • The state requires that at least 75% of the delegates representing the state at the party’s national convention be allocated based on the votes in the presidential primaries. Party Organizations Selecting delegates • Republicans use the vote counts at the congressional district and statewide levels. If a candidate wins more than 50% of the votes within a congressional district , that candidate is entitled to all of the delegates to the Republican convention from that district. If no candidates receive at least 50%, the delegates are divided among each of the candidates who receive more than 20% of the vote. Party Organizations Local parties • Precinct chairs - Elected by party members in each voting precinct by majority vote • County chairs - selected in countywide voting during the primary election • At the county level, the County Executive Committee is composed of a county chair and one precinct chair from each precinct in the county. This committee is a permanent committee. The Texas GOP in 2006 • “…the 2006 Texas Republican party platform has “demanded” the elimination of presidential authority to issue executive orders and the repeal of all previous executive orders, despite the fact that the executive order has become a common tool of President Bush and other Republican presidents.” • “While the Texas Republican Party’s attempt to oust Kay Bailey Hutchison and the 2006 party platform’s independence from President Bush illustrate the potential autonomy of the state parties, such rebellion remains rare because the national party conventions have come to be dominated by the campaign organization of the presidential candidates rather than by the state parties.” Presidential Preference Primaries • State law requires the parties to hold “presidential preference primaries” in conjunction with their regular party primaries. • The state party convention selects the delegates to the national party convention. • Texas held its primaries in June for many years. • Primary elections were moved to early March in 1998. • The 2007 Legislature considered moving the primary date even sooner but settled on March 4, 2008. Types of Elections in TX Primary elections - Democrats & Republicans each hold March primaries to elect candidates to run under the party label in the November general election. Three types of primaries: 1. Closed primary - an election contest restricted to party loyalists, excluding supporters of other political parties and independent voters. 2. Open primary - an electoral contest in which voters do not have to declare party affiliation to participate, but must request a specific party’s ballot at the primary, and are then barred from participating in the other party’s primary. Types of Elections in TX 3. Blanket or wide-open primary - a primary in which voters do not register party affiliation and receive ballots containing the names of all candidates from all political parties running for office. Voters may choose only one candidate per political party. Only Louisiana has a blanket primary for state & local races. • In Texas’s open primary system, voters do not have to declare party affiliation when registering to vote. “…the open primary is more exposed to manipulation from the outside.” Voter Registration & Turnout • Between 1974 and the 1990s, voter registration remained relatively stable: in the low-to-mid 60% range among eligible voters. • Voter registration leveled off to around 80% in the mid-2000s, likely due to “Motor Voter” registration, online registration provided by the Texas Secretary of State’s office. New technologies and databases, along with better training of local election officials, has also influenced voter registration rates. Voter Registration & Turnout • Voter turnout is higher during presidential election years than during “off-year” statewide elections. • Voter turnout is calculated two ways: 1. The percentage of ballots cast in the election based upon the total number of registered voters 2. The percentage of ballots cast in the election based upon the total population over age eighteen (or voting age eligible population) “…the more accurate figure, especially for comparison purposes, is to use the total population over age eighteen.” Voter Registration & Turnout • Texas consistently ranks near the bottom of the list in voter turnout among the fifty states. • Lower voter turnout may be a result of the influence of both the traditionalistic and individualistic political cultures. • In Texas, women are more likely to vote than men. • The youngest of voters (18-24 yrs.) consistently vote at levels much below the national or state average. • “…low voter turnout among African American and Hispanic voters in Texas means that fewer government decisions reflect these groups’ beliefs than might otherwise occur.” • The same holds true for younger voters. Campaign Finance in Texas • Money is essential to political campaigns. • “The issue of campaign finance … raises the issue of whether organized interests ‘buy’ favorable legislation, court rulings, and executive decisions.” • Individual citizens, interest groups, corporations, and labor unions make contributions to candidates and political campaigns. • State & local elections are governed by state campaign finance laws. Campaign Finance in Texas • Disclosure - the reporting of who contributed money to the campaign and how much is contributed by each individual or corporation. • The Texas Ethics Commission is responsible for collecting campaign contributions and expenditures and providing the information to the public. www.ethics.state.tx.us