5.1.1 - Elections - Primaries, Caucuses, and National Conventions Flashcards

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1
Q

Primary elections - What are primaries and caucuses

A
  • Two most common choices of election are primaries and caucuses - decided on a state by state basis
  • Caucuses are a kind of town hall meeting where you move from one candidate to another - public voting at a specific time
  • Primaries are standard elections - polls, lines, secret ballot, etc
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2
Q

Who can vote in which elections?

A
  • National pres elections - all Americans over 18 can vote
  • Most states in primaries will only let you vote if you are a member of the party - closed primaries - independents can’t vote
  • Some have semi-closed primaries where independents can choose one party to vote for but no crossover voting is allowed
  • A few states have open primaries where any citizen irrespective of party allegiances can pick a primary to vote in
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3
Q

When are primaries held, who has the first primary and why, who has the first caucus and why, what is the big milestone?

A
  • Primaries spread throughout the year
  • NH always always the first primary as they have written into state law that their primary will be at least one week before everyone else’s
  • Iowa is technically the first primary but they run a caucus so satisfies NH law
  • Next big milestone is Super Tuesday where loads of states announce results at the same time
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4
Q

How are votes cast in primaries/caucuses?

A
  • Votes go to delegates instead of candidates
  • Some states require delegates to vote the same way as the people but others don’t
  • The delegates then all go to the national party conventions in order to decide the party’s nominee for Pres
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5
Q

What are super delegates?

A
  • Super delegates are top members of the party such as Congressmen or former Pres who represent the party establishment and can vote however they want
  • When there is more than one candidate in the running for nomination super delegates are very important
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6
Q

Advantages of primaries? (3)

A
  • Secret ballots ensure voting is not affected by majority bias or pressure
  • Very simple to run and count the votes
  • Not able to be affected by members of other parties (unless it’s an open primary)
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7
Q

Disadvantages of primaries? (2)

A
  • Wasted votes as some candidates don’t meet the threshold required to be a significant candidate
  • Open ballots have the possibility to be affected by members of opposite party (tho this is very unlikely)
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8
Q

Advantages of caucuses? (3)

A
  • Wasted votes are not a factor as people can get up and move if their first candidate does not have enough support
  • Favours the politically engaged and can be useful to understand more about various candidate’s positions through spending the day at the caucus
  • Representative of variety of candidates
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9
Q

Disadvantages of caucuses?

A
  • Public voting allows for pressure to vote for a candidate
  • Can be quite difficult to organise and properly ensure democratic system of voting
  • People may not have the time or want to go to a caucus all day
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10
Q

How has the role of national conventions changed over the years?

A
  • In the past it was not a sure thing going into a convention who would win so party bosses had a large amount of sway at the convention - smoke filled room politics
  • Modern party conventions emerged after the 1968 Dem convention
  • After this Dems issued a set of rules making primaries more important than conventions for picking a Pres nominee - Reps then followed suit
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11
Q

The role of conventions today?

A
  • The last time a convention started without a clear nominee was over 45 years ago in 1976 at the republican convention
  • Today conventions highlight the presidential nominee and provide a chance for a party to showcase its future talent and rising stars EG Barrack Obama in 2004
  • This shows that the impact of conventions can extend well beyond the presidential tickets
  • Even though we know what the outcome is going to be its still a chance for the parties to highlights and showcase their party, message, and plans for the future in front of a much larger audience
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