Chapter Ten: Campaigning for Office 1. Learning Objectives Identify the reasons people have for...
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Transcript of Chapter Ten: Campaigning for Office 1. Learning Objectives Identify the reasons people have for...
Chapter Ten:
Campaigning for Office
1
Learning Objectives
Identify the reasons people have for seeking public office.
Compare and contrast a primary and a caucus in relation to the party nominating function.
Describe the major changes that have occurred in campaigning for public office over the last decade.
Explain the use of polls and focus groups by candidates and campaigns.
2
Learning Objectives
Briefly explain the rules on public financing of presidential campaigns.
Distinguish between “soft money” and “hard money.”
Explain how the Campaign Reform Act of 2002 encouraged independent expenditures and issue advocacy ads.
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Learning Objectives
Explain why campaign finance reform inevitably produces new ways for money to flow to campaigns (e.g., 527 organizations).
Evaluate the effects of front-loading on the quality and quantity of candidates voter see on the ballot in their state.
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Who Wants to Be a Candidate?
There are two categories of individuals who run for office: self-starters those who are recruited by the party.
The Nomination Process
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Who Wants to Be a Candidate?
Who Is Eligible?
President:
Must be a natural-born citizenAt least 35 years oldBe a resident of the country for 14 years by the
time of inauguration.
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Who Wants to Be a Candidate?
Who Is Eligible? (Continued)
Vice president:
Must be a natural-born citizenAt least 35 years oldNot be a resident of the same state as the
candidate for president
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Who Wants to Be a Candidate?
Who Is Eligible? (Continued)
Senator:
Must be a citizen for at least 9 yearsAt least 30 years old Be a resident of the state from which elected
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Who Wants to Be a Candidate?
Who is Eligible? (Continued)
Representative:
Must be a citizen for at least 7 yearsAt least 25 years oldBe a resident of the state from which elected
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Who Wants to Be a Candidate?
Who Runs?
Holders of political office in the United States are overwhelmingly white and male.
Women as Candidates: number of women running for office has substantially increased
Lawyers as Candidates
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The 21st Century Campaign
The Changing Campaign:
Before most households had televisions, campaigning was personalized. Campaigns today are often less personal, with voters receiving information through the media.
Campaigns have become less party-centered and more candidate-centered.
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The 21st Century Campaign
The Professional CampaignCandidates hire:
political consultants finance chairperson communications director press secretary
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The 21st Century Campaign13
The Strategy of Winning
Candidate Visibility and AppealUse of Opinion PollsFocus GroupsFinancing the Campaign
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Financing the Campaign
Regulating Campaign Financing
Hatch Act (Political Activities Act) of 1939 Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 Federal Election Campaign Act of 1974 Buckley v. Valeo (1976)
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Interest Groups and Campaign Finance: Reaction to New Rules
PACs and Political Campaigns Interest groups can set up PACs to raise funds
for candidates. Funds must be raised from at least 50 volunteer
donors and must be given to at least five candidates in the federal election.
PACs can contribute up to $5,000 to each candidate in each election.
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Interest Groups and Campaign Finance: Reaction to New Rules
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Interest Groups and Campaign Finance: Reaction to New Rules
Campaign Financing Beyond the Limits Soft Money Independent Expenditures Issue Advocacy
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Interest Groups and Campaign Finance: Reaction to New Rules
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 Bans soft money. Allowed campaign ads by outside special-interest
groups up to 60 days before a general election and up to 30 days before a primary election.
Increased contribution limit to $2,000 with annual increases.
Raised maximum amount individuals can give to $95,000 over a two-year election cycle.
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Interest Groups and Campaign Finance: Reaction to New Rules
Rise of the 527s—527s are tax exempt interest groups that use soft money contributions:
Can be partisan or ideological.
Can raise more money than PACs.
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Interest Groups and Campaign Finance: Reaction to New Rules
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Interest Groups and Campaign Finance: Reaction to New Rules
Campaign Financing and the 2008 Elections John McCain used public campaign funds for the
general election. Barack Obama raised over $630 million in
individual donations and did not accept PAC monies.
Citizens United v. FEC (2010)
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Running for President: The Longest Campaign
Primaries:Closed PrimaryOpen PrimaryBlanket PrimaryRunoff primary
Front-Loading the Primaries
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Running for President: The Longest Campaign
The National Conventions Seating the Delegates Convention Activities
Speeches Committee reports Presidential balloting
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Running for President: The Longest Campaign
The General Election Begins after the national conventions. Candidates plan their campaigns to use media
advertising, debates, and Get Out the Vote (GOTV) campaigns.
Must constantly plan to win 270 electoral votes to win.
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Web Links
Federal Election Commission: contains information about current campaign-financing laws and the latest filings of finance reports: www.fec.gov.
Center for Responsive Politics: a nonpartisan, independent and nonprofit research group that tracks money in U.S. politics and its effect on elections and public policy: www.opensecrets.org.
Project Vote Smart: investigates voting records and campaign-financing information:
www.votesmart.org.
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What If…Spending Limits Were Placed on Campaigns?
One of the most fundamental questions about campaign financing is the fairness—to both candidates and voters—of one candidate who raises more money to finance a strong organization and buys more media advertisements than others.
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What If…Spending Limits Were Placed on Campaigns?
Impact of spending limits:
Decline in number of wealthy candidatesLimits on campaign contributionsReduction in number of lobbyistsDecreased revenue for media companies
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You Can Make a Difference: Students on the Campaign Trail
Students can volunteer for political campaigns at the national, state, and local levels by:
helping with fundraising,participating in weekend canvassing,getting people out to vote as election day
approaches, working for one of the party organizations, andvolunteering for an independent political entity.
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You Can Make a Difference: Students on the Campaign Trail
For further information on volunteering for political campaigns, please contact one of the following organizations:
College Democrats of America: www.collegedems.com.
College Republican National Committee: www.crnc.org.
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