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Unit 2 Political Behavior: Gov.’t By the People Ch 5 – Political Parties Ch 6 – Voters and Voter Behavior Ch 7 – The Electoral Process Ch 8 – Mass Media and Public Opinion Ch 9 – Interest Groups Ch 5 – __________________ • What are • Political parties in the US are a group of political parties? persons who seek to ___________ through winning elections + holding ____________. • In the US, they aren’t primarily principleor issue-oriented. They are _________oriented. • They: • are the way which ___________ + broad policy choices are ____________ to the people. • are the ____ b/w the people + the gov.’t. • bring ________ groups together + soften the impact of ________ on both ends of the political spectrum. • Functions of political parties Nominating ___________ Select + ___________ candidates Informing + Activating ___________ Functions of Political Parties ___________ ___________ Help elect through Ensures good ________________, ____________ of educating (in favor its candidates + of their own officeholders (of candidate + against good character the opponent) + stick to party fundraising, ___________ ______________ – somewhat) The ______ function ___________ ___________ ___________ is organized + appointments are made based on ________ Criticizes the ______________ (party of the president/ governor) + keeps them ___________, sort of End Section 1 • The 2-party • system • 2-party system – in an _________________, only 2 parties’ candidates have a reasonable chance of winning office (in the US, Republicans + Democrats) Why? – Nothing is said about political parties is the __________________. 1. ____________________ - Federalists + Democratic-Republicans 2. ____________________ 3. ____________________ - most elections are winner-takes-all + the candidate w/ the most votes (not necessarily a majority) wins - people don’t want to “waste” their vote - system is set up to _________ minor parties 4. The American ______________ consensus - US has been free of long-standing, bitter disputes over economic class, religious beliefs, or national origin unlike many other countries – no need for many parties - Our political parties are very ___________ + _____________ • The multiparty • The multiparty system is one in which several system major + many lesser parties exist, seriously _______________, + win ____________ • Most _________ democracies have a multiparty system • Represents more __________ interests • Often leads to ___________________ • Usually must form coalitions – a temporary alliance of several groups who come together to form a _________________ to control the gov.’t • When the alliance breaks down, a new coalition forms + a new gov.’t takes power • 1-party system • 1-party system results when only one political party is allowed to exist • Most ________________ are 1-party systems • Members of certain segments of the electorate • Party ___________ tend to have similar voting patterns: Typically Democrat: Typically Republican: patterns - ____________ - ____________ - ____________ - ____________ - ____________ - ____________ - ____________________ - _________________ - _________________ - Members of the _____________________ - _________________ - ____________________ • Other influencing factors: • • • • ____________ level Job/working conditions Age (younger people are more likely to vote _________) Residence (farms/suburbs-_________, cities-________, South/Midwest-____________, North/West–_________) • Marital status (married couples are more likely to vote _____________) • Other patterns: • About 2/3 Americans follow the same party as their ____________ • 9/10 Americans share their __________'s political views • Major events like the Civil War + _______________ End Section 2 • ______________ of the 2-party system Hamilton v. Jefferson: Their different views would lead to the creation of a 2 party political system Federalists • Alexander Hamilton • Strong ____________ • Power in the hands of the ______ + ________ • Economy based on ______________, shipping, + __________ • _____ interpretation of Constitution Democratic – Republicans • Thomas Jefferson • Strong _______________ • Power in the hands of the _________ – safer • Economy based on _____________ • _______ interpretation of Constitution • The political spectrum _________ _________ Favors extreme change to create an entirely new social system Believes that gov.’t must take action to change economic, political, + ideological policies that may be unfair Left _____________ Gov.’t ___________ Center ___________ ___________ Seeks to keep in place the economic, political, + ideological, structures of society Favors extreme change to restore society to an earlier state Right __________ Gov.’t • http://typology.people-press.org/typology/ End Section 3 • The minor parties Ex. T. Roosevelt’s “Bull Moose” Progressive Party • A minor party is one of the many political parties w/o _____________________. • Some are limited to a particular locale, _______, or region while some try to spread across the _______ • Most have been _______________ Ex. • 4 types: Socialist Ideological – Splinter – parties that split away from one of the ______ parties (most form around a strong ______________ then disappear when the _________ steps aside) Ex. The Populist Party based on a particular set of ___________ (social, economic, + political) Types of Minor Parties Economic Protest – appear during times of economic _____ then disappear when the economic situation _________ Libertarian Single Issue – focus on 1 single issue Ex. Free Soil Party (opposed slavery) Right to Life Party (oppose abortion) • Why minor • parties are • __________ Can act as a “________” in elections Critic + innovator – draw attention to _________ the major parties tried to _________ - Ex. _________________ , progressive income tax, oldage pensions - When their proposal gains wide-spread support, one or both of the ____________, take it + make it their own + the party loses its _______________. • Party • Both parties are _______________ + __________ fragmented w/ internal __________, although different offices of the same party often (but not always) ________ w/ one another. • There is no __________________ running from the national to the local level. • The __________ serves as his party’s leader. • The __________ has no leader. • Party _________ • The national convention is the meeting that occurs every summer in a ___________________ year to nominate the party’s president + v.p candidate. It also writes the party’s __________. • In theory, the parties’ affairs are handled at meetings by the national committee + __________________ b/w conventions. In reality, they have little _________. • Promotes party ________, raises $, recruits voters, + prepares for __________ • The congressional campaign committee works to elect members of their party into _____________. • The _____ of • The major parties have been major parties ___________ since the 1960s. Factors in the decline of the major political parties Drop in the # of voters who _________ themselves as Republican or Democrat Increase in split-ticket Greater voting (voting internal for different __________ + ________ for disorganization different _______ in the same ________) Changes in ____________, especially ____________, The growth which makes of ___________ it easier for organizations candidates to “________” directly to the electorate End Section 5 Ch 6 – Voters and Voter _________ • The ______ of • The framers of the Constitution voting rights deliberately left ______ the power to set up suffrage _______________. Suffrage + franchise both mean the right to vote. • When the Constitution went into effect in 1789, the electorate (potential voting population) was limited to white, male __________ ___________. • ________ suffrage: The 5 stages White, Male property owners (1800s) Elimination of religious, property, + tax payment qualifications By mid 1800s, almost all white men could vote (1870) The 15th Amendment gave _______ the right to vote (many still denied the right) (1920) The 19th Amendment gave _________ the right to vote (1960s) Federal legislation secured black voting rights The 23rd Amendment added D.C. voters to the presidential electorate The 24th Amendment eliminated the ________________ (1971) The 26th Amendment gave __________ ______ the right to vote (states could set a lower age) End Section 1 • Voter • qualifications All states have the following _______________ for voters: 1. ________________ 2. ___________ – must live in the state you’re voting in. Some states require you to live there up to 30 days before the election to vote there 3. _______ –18 or lower • Other qualifications: • • • • ____________ – all states except N. Dakota require voters to register to prevent voter fraud _______ tests – used mostly to discriminate – BANNED ________ – used to discriminate – BANNED People banned from voting: • Mentally incompetent, those ___________ of serious crimes, + in some states, people dishonorably discharged from the ________ End Section 2 • Tactics used to • Violence, threats, ____________ prevent ______ • Legally from voting after • “White primaries” – outlawed th the 15 by the Supreme Court (1944) Amendment • Gerrymandering (drawing electoral district lines in order to ____ the voting strength of a particular group or party) – outlawed by the Supreme Court in 1960 • _________ – banned by the 24th Amendment (1964) • ____________ – banned by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 End Section 3 • Non-voters • In 2004, only about ____% of eligible people voted. • Voter turnout is even _______ in off-year elections (evennumbered years b/w _________ elections ex. 2006, 2010) • The more ____ the election, the fewer people tend to ________ • Ex. More people vote for president than governor, more people vote for governor than mayor, etc… • Why people don’t vote: Nonvoters _______ Vote Too ill/ In a _______ physically health __________ facility In prison/ committed a _______ crime Discrimination/ other pressures Didn’t __________ Do Not Vote (___________) Those who believe no matter who wins the election, things will _______________________ for them + for the country Those who lack any Those who fear or feeling of influence scorn the system + or effectiveness – believe elections are They don’t believe _______________ +/or choiceless they have any ________ Do Not Vote (____________) Bad _______ Long voting lines “___________ fallout” Lack of _______ (ignorant) • Characteristics of _________ voters • Higher levels of income, __________, + _______________ status • Well integrated into _______________ • Tend to be ________ residents who are active/comfortable w/ their surroundings • Strong sense of party ______________ • Characteristics of ______________ • • • • • Other trends in voting • Women are ____ likely to vote than men • The more __________ the election, the more likely people are to vote Under ______ ____________ ____________ Live in the _______ +/or _______ areas • Party • A majority of Americans identify themselves ____________ w/ one of the _______ parties + many never _________ their party affiliation • Party identification is the single most significant + _________ predictor of how a person will vote. A person who is Democrat will very likely vote for all or most of that party’s candidates in any given election. Same w/ Republicans. • Strait-ticket voting is the practice of voting for candidates of ___________ in an election • Although still a major factor, party identification has lost __________________ recently • Split-ticket voting is the practice of voting for the candidates of ________ one party in an election • Independents • Independents are people who have no party _________ (major or minor), but many actually support one of the major parties quite ___________. • It’s estimated that _______% of voters are independents. • Until recently, typical independents were less ________, well _________, +/or politically active than Republicans or Democrats. • “New” independents began appearing in the 1960s. They are often young w/ _____________ education, income, + job status. End Section 4 Ch 7 – The ____________ Process • The • __________ process • Nomination is the naming of those who will seek ___________ There are 5 ways which nominations are made in the US: 1. ____________ 2. ________________ 3. __________ 4. __________ 5. ____________ • Petition • Requires signatures of _________________ • Used mostly at the ________________ • Selfannouncement • The ________ form of the nominating process in the US. • A person simply announces that they will be running for office (or due to modesty or _______ __________, may have someone make the announcement for them). • Sometimes used by someone who _____ to win a regular party nomination or is unhappy w/ the party’s _________. • Caucus • A group of _________________ who meet privately to select the candidates they will support in an upcoming election. • Used to be done in ______________ by party – led to protests. • Today used to make some local nominations (especially in New England) – but now open to _____________________. • Convention • Replaced the use of widespread ___________. • By 1832, all ____________ presidential candidates have been chosen by conventions. • It began at the ____ level, by nominating local officials + choosing delegates to the _________ elections. At the county level, they nominate county officials + choose delegates to the ____ elections. At the state level, they nominate state officials + chose delegates to the _______ level. At the national level they nominate their party’s candidate for president + _________________. • The system became ______ at the local level – which spread up to the national level. This led to _________________ replacing conventions in most states, but conventions are still used at the national level. • Direct primary • Direct primaries are ___________ elections (they occur w/in the party). • ______ states rely solely on this method for choosing candidates w/in the major parties for all major _______ + many _____ as well. • Most of these states regulate the primaries (not the _______________ themselves). • 2 types: • In closed primaries only declared party members __________. Voters must register as being either Republican or Democrat. ______ states use this. • In open primaries any _____________ can cast a ballot for either party, but not _______. 23 states use this. • Arguments for + against each type on p. 184 • The ________ • Lack of voter ____________ – frustrated w/ primaries that they can’t vote in multiple parties, long ballots, + in closed primary states _____________ that they have to declare which party they will vote for. • Low voter ______ (usually less than __ of the general election turnout) • ______ – many well-qualified people don’t run for office • _________ parties – Republicans + Democrats ________________________ while campaigning in primaries + sometimes don’t recover in time for the general election • Voter __________ – usually pick the most familiar sounding __________ End Section 1 • The • Democratic gov.’ts cannot succeed administration unless elections are ______, _______, + of _________ _________. • In the US, _____________ elections are held on the first _________ following the first _________ in November on ______numbered yrs. • ________________ are every 4 yrs on the same day. • Most elections for ___________ are on the same day + ___________ often are as well. • Some states have the elections on ____________ instead + local elections can vary widely. • If anyone is ill, disabled, or traveling they can vote by ____________ ballot. • Some states allow voters to cast their ballots up to several days prior to the election. • But they can’t _____________ until election day • Precincts are voting districts. They are the ________________________ for the conduct of elections End Section 2 • Campaign ________ • What do political candidates spend $ on while campaigning? • Newspaper/radio/tv ads + _________________ • Professional campaign ___________ + consultants • Pamphlets/posters/buttons/ ________________ • Office ______ • ________/data processing • ________ • ______ make up the largest % of campaign spending • Campaign __________ • Where do candidates get their $ from? 1. _________________ A. Small contributors B. Wealthy individuals C. The ____________ D. Nonparty groups – especially PACs (Political Action Committees), the political arm of special-interest + other organizations E. ____________________ formed to help campaign + raise $ 2. _____________ - $ from the gov.’t • Why do people/organizations donate $? • They ______________ a party/candidate • They want __________ to the gov.’t • They want appointments to ___________ • They want _____________________ • They have __________ aims • __________ • The national gov.’t has ___________ regulating campaign donations for candidates running for federal donations office, but doesn’t have the _______ to regulate campaign donations at the state + local level • Every state has some ____________________ regulations • The Federal Election Commission (FEC) administers all federal law dealing w/ campaign finance. Federal campaign finance laws aren’t very well enforced b/c the FEC is ___________ + _______________. • Laws under the FEC’s control: 1. The timely _________ of campaign finance data 2. Limits on campaign ____________ 3. Limits on campaign ___________ 4. Providing public funding for parts of the presidential election process • PACs • Political Action Committees, the political arm of special-interest + other organizations. • There are over ____ PACs registered w/ the FEC, including the PACs for the American Medical Association, the National Education Association, the American Trial Lawyers, etc • PACs receive ____________ from people + corporations, then ________ them into large donations to candidates sympathetic to the PACs ________________ • PACs cannot give more than ________ to a federal candidate for a primary election + another ______ for the general election, but can give to as many candidates as they wish • PACs can give _________ a year to political parties • Hard money v. • Part of the difficulty ________ campaign soft money funding is b/c of soft $ • Hard $ is $ raised + spent to elect congressional + presidential candidates • Soft $ is $ given to a ________ _____________ for “party-building activities” like candidate recruitment, voter registration, etc • It is then _________ into presidential + congressional campaigns • Federal laws didn’t place _________ on soft $ until recently, but there are still many _____________. End Section 3 Ch 8 – __________ and Public Opinion • Public opinion • Public opinion are __________ held by a significant # of people on matters of gov.’t + politics _________* ________ Events ________ Leaders People tend to associate w/ people who share their political values What shapes public opinion? _______ Groups Basic beliefs that shape political opinions _________* Political indoctrination _____ _______ End Section 1 • Determining public opinion • Why do we need to _______ public opinion? • So that _____________ can reflect PUBLIC OPINION • Or so politicians can get ______ How is public opinion determined? Interest Groups ________ (private organizations whose members share certain views + work to shape the making + content of public policy) ________ _______ ________ (could just be a vocal minority) (meetings, letters, emails, calls, etc) ______ (The best measure IF done accurately) • Poll validity • In order for a poll to be valid, the _______, not just the _________, of people interviewed is important. • The people interviewed must represent all __________________ • Ex. If taking a presidential poll, people of all ________, religious, geographic, _______, economic, + educational backgrounds must be interviewed – also _______ + age. • Also of concern is the way the questions are ___________. • They must avoid words that are _________________, difficult to understand, or ____________. End Section 2 • Mass media • Mass media means of _______________ to a large # of people. • Ex. tv, ___________, radio, internet, magazines, books, + _________ • It influences politics most visibly in 2 areas: 1. The _____________ 2. __________ Politics • The influence • The public agenda - the societal _________ that of _________ the nation’s political leaders + the general public agree need __________________. • The _______ draws attention to various topics, they may _____________ some problems while ______________ others. • Determines what people talk about + forces politicians to _____________. • Electoral politics – have led to the ______ of the major parties. W/ mass media, candidates can appeal directly to the _________ + aren’t as dependent on the party machinery for their nominations ______________. • Candidates + politicians regularly try to _____________ media coverage to their advantage. They know good news stories take no more than _______ + show them doing something interesting or exciting. • The limits of • Few people follow international, national, mass media’s or local political events very ________. __________ • When people do pay some attention to politics, they often watch, listen, +/or read sources that generally _________ their own views + ignore the _________. • Few news shows air during __________. • Content is highly _______ + usually only _____________ in length. End Section 3 Ch 9 – Interest Groups • Interest groups • An interest group (a.k.a. ________ groups or advocacy groups) is a private organization that tries to _________ public officials to respond to the _____________ of its members. • They wish to influence the making + content of ______________. • They do that by lobbying (putting pressure on politicians). • Protected by the ____________. The 1st Amendment guarantees the rights to peacefully assemble + to petition the gov.’t • Function at all _____ of gov.’t (local – national). • Differences b/w • interest groups + political parties Both interest groups + political parties are groups made up of people who unite for some _________ ______. However, they have 3 major differences: 1. The making of _______________ - Interest groups may _________ a candidate, but they do NOT nominate one. 2. Their ________________ - Interest groups want to control or influence gov.’t ________ while political parties want to ____________ + control the gov.’t itself *So interest groups don’t have to worry about appealing to the ____________________ 3. The scope of their _____________ - Interest groups are not concerned w/ the whole range of ________________ - Also, interest groups are private organizations • Functions of interest groups ____________ _______ in public affairs (issues + events that concern people at large) Compete w/ one another to help keep policies _________ Unite members based on ________ ___________ instead of geography ___________ ______________ of Interest Groups Provide useful, specialized, + detailed ____________ to the gov.’t Keep a close watch on officials + ________________ Encourage + assist in political ___________ ________ W/ Interest Groups Some have too much ____________ – their influence often depends more on their organization + ________ than their size, importance, or contribution to public good It’s often difficult to tell just how many _________ a group represents – their titles often suggest that they _____________ more people than they really do Many groups are dominated by an active __________ who make the group’s __________________ – their views may not reflect the views of all of the people they claim to represent Some groups use illegal +/or __________ tactics – such as bribery, threats of revenge, assembling misleading _____, etc… End Section 1 • Types of interest groups: 1. Economic Interest Groups • Groups based on how people ___________________. • This is the most ____________ type of interest group. • The most active + __________ are those representing business, labor, agriculture, + certain _____________ groups. • The United States Brewers’ Association is the ______ organized group at work in national politics today – born in 1862. • Trade associations are segments of the ___________ community that have formed their own interest groups. (Ex. bankers, restaurateurs, etc) • Labor unions are organizations of workers who share the same type of job or work in the same __________. (Ex. machinists, police, gov.’t employees, + etc) • Over ____ of Americans belong to labor unions • ___________ groups have enormous influence on the gov.’t but farmers make up less than __ of Americans. • Professional groups aren’t usually as well organized or financed as business, labor, + farm groups • 3 major exceptions National ____________ Association, the American Bar Association, + the American ___________ Association. • 2. Interest Groups • Causes: that ___________ • The _________________________ (ACLU) Causes, the Welfare fights in + out of court to protect civil + of Certain Groups, political rights. It works for major reforms in +/or ____________ the political process. Organizations • The _______________________ work to stimulate participation in + greater knowledge about public affairs. • Other ex: the National Wildlife Federation, Friends of the Earth, the ______________ Association. • Some organizations fight for __________ causes like the National Right-to-Life Committee and Planned Parenthood. • The Welfare of Certain Groups: • Ex: Veterans of Foreign Wars, _________, __________, etc • Religious Organizations: • Ex: The _________________, The American Jewish Congress, etc • 3. Public• Groups that seek to institute certain public Interest Groups policies of ________ to all or most people in this country, whether or not they belong to or support that ______________. • Ex. Environmental Groups ______________ Groups • Fortune Magazine "Power 20 Survey for 2001" The Top 20 Interest Groups 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. ____________________________ American Association of Retired People (AARP) National Federation of Independent Business American _________ Foreign Affairs Committee Association of Trial Lawyers of America AFL-CIO Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America 8. National Beer Wholesalers of America 9. National Association of Realtors 10. National Association of Manufacturers 11. National Association of Homebuilders of the United States 12. American Medical Association 13. American Hospital Association 14. National Education Association of the United States 15. American Farm Bureau Federation 16. Motion Picture Association of America 17. National Association of Broadcasters 18. National Right to Life Committee 19. Health Insurance Association of America 20. National Restaurant Association End Section 2 • Interest groups • influence over the public • • • • Interest groups seek to influence public opinion for 3 reasons: 1. To supply the public w/ __________ it thinks the people should have 2. To build a ________________ for their group. 3. To promote a particular _______________. Interest groups try to influence public attitudes by using propaganda (___________ information used to further a cause or damage an opponent’s cause). Propaganda begins w/ a __________ + then brings in _________ to support that conclusion + disregards all other information. Propaganda rarely attacks the _________ of a policy it opposes, instead preferring _______________ or by presenting only one side of an issue. Propaganda will support policies w/ labels by using very general terms + symbols, often patriotic ones. It may also use testimonials, the bandwagon approach, or the plain-folks approach. • How interest • Some groups keep close ties w/ one or the other major groups seek to political party + some try to get the support of _______. influence parties, • They may raise $ for a candidate’s __________. elections, + • They may come up w/ campaign ads supporting politicians a candidate of one party +/or attacking another. • Some urge their members to become ________ in party affairs. • They all _________________ to influence public policy. • Many lobbyists are former ______________, lawyers, former journalists, etc • They lobby in different ways, such as: • Providing politicians w/ __________ favorable to their cause. • Testifying in legislative committees as “______”. • Stir up “grass-roots” campaigns (grass-roots means, “of or from the people”). • Rating members of Congress based on their ________________. • Lobbyists may make campaign contributions, provide information, write speeches, + even draft ___________. • Lobbyists may also seek to influence the __________ + judiciary branches as well. End Section 3