Political Parties, Elections, and Campaign Finance



Some terms and ideas from past units that you need

Single member district

Proportional representation


Top of Form

Chapter 16-3


Proportional Representation

Caucus

Direct/Blanket Primary

Closed Primary

Open Primary

Party Platform


· Pros and Cons of the different primary systems

o How does a closed primary system lead to more polarized candidates?

o What is the practice of “crossover voting”

o Why are open primaries fair to some voters but not to members of political parties?

· How are delegates to the national convention chosen? How are the number of delegates each state’s political party sends to the national convention determined?

· What is the role of the national convention?

o What happened “back in the day”?

o What happens there now?

· Explain the “spoiler role” and “innovator role” of a minor party.

· What roles does a political party play in American politics?


o Governing

o Informing

o Nominating

o Bonding

o Watchdog


Congressional Elections and Gerrymandering


Census

Reapportionment

Redistricting

Gerrymandering

Incumbent

Zero-Sum Situation


· Reasons why reapportionment is needed

o Why do we have such an odd number of representatives (435), and why is reapportionment needed?

· Why is redistricting occasionally needed?

· What are the two primary goals of gerrymandering?

o To help candidates win who otherwise would not

o To help make districts “safe” from election challenges

· Gerrymandering methods:

o Packing v Cracking gerrymandering

· Four rules that try to make districting fair

o Baker v Carr

o Wesbury v Sanders

o Shaw v Reno

§ How the doctrine of “similar interests” helps politicians get around Shaw v Reno?

Electoral College – Ch. 8-2


Electoral College

Winner-Take-All

Time Zone Fallout

Popular vote


· How does the Electoral College work?


o How many total votes?

o How are votes divided?

o How many are needed to win?

o How does a candidate win electoral votes?

o 50 small elections (not one national election)

o Implications of this


· Why the Founders did not want the president elected by popular election?

· Why did the Founders not want the president elected by the House of Representatives?

· Why did the founders not want the president chosen by the state legislature?

· What principle is reinforced by the Electoral College plan?

· How did the development of political parties change the way the Electoral College works?

· What problems do many have with the Electoral College?

o “Faithless Electors”

o Big state vs Small state problems

§ Unfair to citizens of large population states

§ Tie breaking system in the House of Representatives

o “Winner take all” problems:

§ “Safe States” vs. Swing/Battleground States

§ Win the election but lose the presidency

§ Not representative of the people’s choice

· The Big State/Small state electoral vote problem (Why some states would want to split their votes and others not)

· Why (according to conventional wisdom) would a small state want to keep the Electoral College?

· One solution to some electoral college problems is to have the states adopt (like Nebraska and Maine already have) the “Proportional Plan.” What is this?

· The Election of 1800 disaster

o The 12th amendment

· What is the most major obstacle to changing the Electoral College?

·

Election Campaigns and Financing – Chapter 17


Political Action Committee

Soft Money

Hard Money


· Affiliated PACs

· Donation patterns of PACs…who gets PAC money?

o What limits are there on PAC money and activities?

· Federal Matching Funds of presidential campaigns

o Theory behind offering it

o Why don’t candidates accept it anymore?

· Attempted goals of McCain-Feingold Act

· What is the effect of an “off-year election” on voter turnout?

· What is the effect smaller election turnout on the results of an election?

· How can the restrictions on campaign donations be considered a Freedom of Speech violation?

o Buckley v Valeo

o Citizens United v FEC

o “Swing my fist principle” of rights limitation




Net Neutrality

· Basic definition

· How the term “net neutrality” can mean different things

o Concept of a neutral net

o Idea that government regulation is the best way to preserve that

· Pros and Cons