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TOPIC 2 POLITICAL BEHAVIOR Mr. Kallusingh POLITICAL PARTIES The purpose of political parties is to give the people a voice, nominate candidates, inform and activate supporters, control candidates, govern, act as a watchdog Two-Party system started with the federalist and anti-federalist, and continues the main reason it continues is that people can be stuck in their ways POLITICAL PARTIES NATIONAL ORGANIZATION National Convention- comes together to chose the Presidential and vice-presidential candidates National Committee- is comprised of the major political figures in the party, mainly is in charge of planning the national convention National Chairperson- helps with party unity, raising money, and recruiting new voters Congressional Campaign Committee- is in charge of selecting candidates to run for congress POLITICAL PARTIES STATE AND LOCAL LEVEL State Organization- look for party unity, finding candidates, campaign funds Local Organization- local structures are so different across the nation that it is hard to define, most work within their ward/ precincts at election times POLITICAL PARTIES COALITION In multiparty systems coalitions need to be formed to have a majority and avoid constant change and upheaval, coalitions are agreements among competing party groups to work together to form a majority POLITICAL PARTIES (THIRD PARTIES) Ideological Parties- focus on a comprehensive view of social, economic, and political matters; have usually been long lived Single-issue Parties- usually focus on one issue i.e. slavery, abortion; fade away as the issue becomes less prevalent POLITICAL PARTIES (THIRD PARTIES) Economic Protest Parties- a rooted in periods of economic discontent; disappear as the economy gets better Splinter Parties- usually rally around a strong personality that leaves a major political party; go away when the candidate returns to their original party INTEREST GROUPS Are private organization that tries to persuade public officials to follow their beliefs Interest groups are not concerned with broad concepts; they do not care who is elected but do care about what they do; they are not accountable to the public but to their members INTEREST GROUP TYPES Business Groups- promote the interest of their individual business or business type Labor Groups- are workers in a similar field; they press the government for favorable policies in their field Agricultural Groups- farmers makeup less than 2% of the population; different groups usually compete against each other (dairy vs. soy) INTEREST GROUP TYPES Professional Groups- occupations that require extensive training i.e. medicine, law, teaching; usually are not very organized; want to promote profession and influence policy Groups that promote causes like NRA, American Civil Liberties Union, and Planned Parenthood INTEREST GROUP TYPES Groups that promote welfare like the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign wars, and AARP Religious Organizations that promote their religion Public-Interest groups try and promote the well being of all people and not a particular segment of society INTEREST GROUP TECHNIQUES Give public information, build positive image of group, promote favorable legislation Use propaganda to make people believe their argument to be true regardless of the truth Lobbyist try to influence the policies that are put into place to help their own interest groups, Lobbying Disclosure Act 1995 tries to regulate this influence VOTING BEHAVIOR The right to vote started with white male land owners and has expanded to any citizen over 18 is eligible to vote Each state has the right to control voting qualifications, but they must follow certain federal guidelines and can be overridden by the federal government VOTING BEHAVIOR Voter qualifications citizenship, residence, age, registration Sociological Factors- lower-income voters tend to be more democratic and higher income are more republican; more educated tends to vote republican; women more demo men more repub; young more demo older more repub; protestants more repub, Catholics and Jews more demo; ELECTORAL PROCESS The nomination process can be done by the caucus, convention, or a direct/ open primary People use secret ballots to vote by their precinct in a polling place; if you can not be present to vote you can request an absentee ballot ELECTORAL PROCESS Campaign spending is mostly used on the Presidential election 2000 1.5 billion dollars Campaign funding can come from many different sources small contributors, wealthy individuals, candidates (Perot $65 million), political action committees PAC, temporary organizations; people giving money either like the party or want something in return ELECTORAL PROCESS The government has enacted a few laws that try and regulate how much money can be given to campaigns, but parties have found loopholes and exploited them PUBLIC OPINION Public opinion is a group of people that believe the same thing; these beliefs come from personal experience Another influence on public opinion is mass media tv, newspaper, magazine, radio, internet