Chapter 8
Campaigns, Elections and Voting Behavior
Who Is Eligible to Run for Office ?
• there are few eligibility requirements to run for most U.S. offices
• President– must be a natural born citizen– must be 35 years old– must be a resident of the country for 14 years before inauguration
• Vice President– must be a natural born citizen– must be 35 years old– must not be a resident of the same state as the presidential
candidate
Who Is Eligible to Run for Office ? (cont.)
• Senate– must be a citizen for at least nine years
– must be 30 years old
– must be a resident of the state from which elected
• Representative– must be a citizen for at least seven years
– must be 25 years old
– must be a resident of the state from which elected
The Modern Campaign Machine
• longer campaigns than in past times• greater emphasis on funds• lesser emphasis on political parties• greater reliance on political consultants, who
are hired to devise a campaign strategy• greater emphasis on candidate visibility, or
name recognition• greater use of polls and focus groups
Regulating Campaign Finance
• Federal Corrupt Practices Act of 1925– limited election expenses for candidates
– required disclosures
– was ineffective because of its many loopholes
• The Hatch Act of 1939– prohibited groups from spending more than $3 million
in a campaign
– limited individual contributions to committees to $5,000
– restricted political activities of civil servants
– designed to end influence peddling
Regulating Campaign Finance (cont.)
• Federal Election Campaign Act of 1972 – restricted mass media expenditures– limited contributions by candidate and family members– required disclosure of all contributions over $80
• Federal Election Campaign Act of 1974– created the Federal Election Commission– provided public financing of presidential elections’– limited presidential election campaign spending– limited contributions– required disclosure of contributions and
expenditures
Regulating Campaign Finance (cont.)
Buckley v. Valeo (1976) declared the 1972 limitation on what an individual could spend on his or her own election unconstitutional The Bi-partisan Campaign Finance Reform Act of 2002 – bans soft, limits interest group advertising, increases individual contribution limit to $2000
Running for President
• Types of Presidential Primaries– closed primary – only voters who are declared party
members can vote in that party’s primary– open primary – voters can vote in either party primary
without disclosing their party affiliation– blanket primary – voters can vote in primary elections for
candidates of more than one party (a Democrat for the presidential nominee and a Republican for the Senate nominee, for example)
– run-off primary – if no candidate receives a majority in the first primary, some states require a second primary between the top two candidates
The Electoral College
• Electors in the Electoral College actually elect the president and vice president of the United States
• the numbers of electors in each state in equal to that state’s number of representatives in both houses of Congress
• electors typically cast their votes for the candidate that receives the plurality of votes in that state
• because of the winner take all system of the electoral college, it typically serves to exaggerate the popular margin of victory
How Presidents and Vice Presidents are Chosen
General Election
(first Tuesday in November)
Voters vote for electors
Electoral College
(1st Monday after second
Wednesday in December)
Electors vote for president
and vice president
respectively
IF top presidential and vice-
presidential candidates
receive fewer than
270 electoral
votes, decisions
are made in the House
and Senate. Each state gets one
vote in the House, two votes in the
Senate.
HouseRepresentatives
vote for president by
state. Majority is needed to win.
SenateSenators vote for
vice president (from top 2 candidates). Majority is
needed to win.
Vice presidential candidate receives 51 votes or more.
Presidential candidate receives 26 votes or more.
Top presidential candidate
receives 270 votes or more
Top vice-presidential
candidate receives 270 votes or more
President elected
Vice president
elected
President elected
Vice president
elected
If no pres. Candidate receives 26 votes by Jan. 20, and v.p. has been elected, v.p. becomes acting pres. until pres. is elected by the House.
If neither candidate is elected by Jan. 20, speaker of the House becomes acting pres. until pres. is elected by the House.
If no v.p. candidate is elected by Jan. 20, and pres. has been elected, a v.p. is appointed by the pres. and approved by Congress.
Factors that Influence Who Votes
• age
• educational attainment
• minority status
• income levels
• two-party competition
Figure 8-2: Voter Turnout for Presidential and Congressional Elections, 1900 to Present
Hot Links to Selected Internet Resources:
• Book’s Companion Site: http://politicalscience.wadsworth.com/schmidtbrief2004
• Wadsworth’s Political Science Site: http://politicalscience.wadsworth.com
• Federal Election Commission: http://www.fec.gov
• OpenSecrets.org: http://www.opensecrets.org
• Center for Voting and Democracy: http://www.fairvote.org