The Old Way ( ) 9/2/13. The Road to the White House. Nominations Primaries and Caucuses. Road to the White House Overview

Similar documents
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 20 AT 6 AM

Conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center

FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 AT 4 PM

FOR RELEASE: MONDAY, DECEMBER 10 AT 4 PM

Conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center

American Presidential Elections. The American presidential election system has produced some interesting quirks, such as...

FOR RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1 AT 4 PM

McCain s Rejection Rate Spikes; Matches Clinton s, Romney s Higher

The Winthrop Poll Findings

Presidents of the United States Cards

The Road to the White House

The margin of error for 1,004 interviews is ± 3.1%

Presidential term: Lived: Occupations: Planter, Lawyer. Vice Presidents: Aaron Burr, George Clinton

FOR RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14 AT 4 PM

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

Giuliani, 9/11 and the 2008 Race

mith College Computer Science Lecture Notes Week 11 Everyday Python CSC111 Spring 2015 Dominique Thiébaut

2008 Democratic Nomination

FOX News/Opinion Dynamics Poll 1 February 08

2016 us election results

Franklin Pierce University / WBZ Poll

MEMBERS OF THE RNC AND DNC HAVE OPPOSING VIEWS ABOUT HOW THE COUNTRY IS DOING AND HOW TO HANDLE THE IRAQ WAR

WNBC/Marist Poll Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

Conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center

SS7 CIVICS, CH. 8.1 THE GROWTH OF AMERICAN PARTIES FALL 2016 PP. PROJECT

CONTACT: TIM VERCELLOTTI, Ph.D., (732) , EXT. 285; (919) (cell) CLINTON SOLIDIFIES LEADS OVER PRIMARY RIVALS

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

Democrats, Clinton, Giuliani Hold Strongest Hands

LSP In-Class Activity 5 Working with PASW 20 points Due by Saturday, Oct. 17 th 11:59 pm ANSWERS

2008 AMERICAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: AN OVERVIEW

Defining the Arab American Vote

Expansion and Reform. (Early 1800s-1861) PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES. By Daniel Casciato

New HampshireElection IssuesSurvey. Wave3. December13,2007

Presidential Project

INSTITUTE of PUBLIC POLICY

2008 Electoral Vote Preliminary Preview

Official List Candidates for President For February 2008 Primary Election, (w) denotes winner. County

Overall, in our view, this is where the race stands with Newt Gingrich still an active candidate:

SELA Antenna in the United States SELA Permanent Secretary No th Quarter 2007

Research Skills. 2010, 2003 Copyright by Remedia Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the U.S.A.

SouthCarolinaElection IssuesSurvey

election guide Primaries & caucuses debates filing deadlines conventions

Elder Financial Abuse and State Mandatory Reporting Laws for Financial Institutions Prepared by CUNA s State Government Affairs

Key Factors That Shaped 2018 And A Brief Look Ahead

SPECIAL EDITION 11/6/14

Presented by: Ted Bornstein, Dennis Cardoza and Scott Klug

Race to the White House Drive to the 2016 Republican Nomination. Ron Nehring California Chairman, Ted Cruz for President

CRS-2 Currently, only 10 of the 37 presidential grave sites are maintained by the federal government. 3 Due to the high number of privately managed pr

CA CALIFORNIA. Ala. Code 10-2B (2009) [Transferred, effective January 1, 2011, to 10A ] No monetary penalties listed.

WikiLeaks Document Release

Matthew Miller, Bureau of Legislative Research

UNIFORM NOTICE OF REGULATION A TIER 2 OFFERING Pursuant to Section 18(b)(3), (b)(4), and/or (c)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933

Conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Research Center

CONTACT: TIM VERCELLOTTI, Ph.D., (732) , EXT. 285; (919) (cell) GIULIANI AND CLINTON LEAD IN NEW JERSEY, BUT DYNAMICS DEFY

FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19 AT 4 PM

Mountain Green Elementary School 5 th Grade Great American Award

Trump, Populism and the Economy

If you have questions, please or call

Post-War United States

THE DEMOCRATS IN NEW HAMPSHIRE January 5-6, 2008

The margin of error for 1,008 interviews is ± 3.1%

Franklin Pierce / WBZ Poll

The U.S. Electoral System and the 2008 Presidential Elections. Toni M. Fine Assistant Dean Fordham Law School (New York City)

Hillary Clinton Leading the Democratic Race in California

TEACHER S GUIDE Educational Video Group, Inc.

Campaigns & Elections November 6, 2017 Dr. Michael Sullivan. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT GOVT 2305 MoWe 5:30 6:50 MoWe 7 8:30

About the Survey. Rating and Ranking the Presidents

Geek s Guide, Election 2012 by Prof. Sam Wang, Princeton University Princeton Election Consortium

ELECTION UPDATE Tom Davis

Laws Governing Data Security and Privacy U.S. Jurisdictions at a Glance UPDATED MARCH 30, 2015

States Adopt Emancipation Day Deadline for Individual Returns; Some Opt Against Allowing Delay for Corporate Returns in 2012

Survey of State Laws on Credit Unions Incidental Powers

Analyzing presidential elections without incumbents. Alexander Slutsker. University of Maryland. I. Introduction

SMALL STATES FIRST; LARGE STATES LAST; WITH A SPORTS PLAYOFF SYSTEM

Iowa Presidential Election Results,

Contemporary United States

Solutions. Algebra II Journal. Module 3: Standard Deviation. Making Deviation Standard

How did third parties affect US Presidential Campaigns since 1900? By Tom Hyndman 9E

Making a Difference In Washington, D.C.

Voting and Elections

Political Contributions Report. Introduction POLITICAL CONTRIBUTIONS

Polling Young Voters, Volume V

The sustained negative mood of the country drove voter attitudes.

American Presidents American Presidents

Mathematics of the Electoral College. Robbie Robinson Professor of Mathematics The George Washington University

Some Change in Apportionment Allocations With New 2017 Census Estimates; But Greater Change Likely by 2020

APPENDIX C STATE UNIFORM TRUST CODE STATUTES

Section 4. Table of State Court Authorities Governing Judicial Adjuncts and Comparison Between State Rules and Fed. R. Civ. P. 53

Statutes of Limitations for the 50 States (and the District of Columbia)

State Prescription Monitoring Program Statutes and Regulations List

A Nation Divides. TIME: 2-3 hours. This may be an all-day simulation, or broken daily stages for a week.

Representational Bias in the 2012 Electorate

The US Electoral College: the antiquated key to presidential success

DELEGATE STRENGTH - AN OVERVIEW BY CNN POLLING DIRECTOR KEATING HOLLAND

Red, white, and blue. One for each state. Question 1 What are the colors of our flag? Question 2 What do the stars on the flag mean?

Selecting a President: The Presidential Nomination and Election Process

ERA OF GOOD FEELINGS

ELECTING THE PRESIDENT:

Duration of Representatives Incumbency in the U. S. House

Museum of World Treasures

Transcription:

The Road to the White House Nominations Primaries and Caucuses Road to the White House Overview Presidential Elections The Road to the White House (A) The Primary System: Nominating Presidential Candidates 1. Historical Roots and The Old Way 2. The Reforms of 1972 and The New Way 3. The Primary Electorate 4. Campaign Finance 5. Summary: The Dynamics of Primary Campaigns (B) Politics and the Media 1. Incentives: Management, Reporters, Candidates 2. The Relationship between Reporters and Candidates 3. Characteristics of Political Reporting (C) The General Election: Choosing a President 1. The Rules of the Game --- Electoral College 2. The General Electorate 3. Candidate Decision Making and Campaign Strategy The Old Way (1836-1968) [1] Delegate Selection: State party leaders controlled the selection of delegates to the national convention. 1

The Old Way (1836-1968) [1] Delegate Selection: State party leaders controlled the selection of delegates to the national convention. [2] Nomination politics: The nomination game was then a struggle among the candidates to win the support of state party leaders and their delegations. The Old Way (1836-1968) [1] Delegate Selection: State party leaders controlled the selection of delegates to the national convention. [2] Nomination politics: The nomination game was then a struggle among the candidates to win the support of state party leaders and their delegations. [3] Rank and File Voters: Primaries were largely beauty contests in which candidates tried to demonstrate their ability to attract votes. The Old Way (1836-1968) [1] Delegate Selection: State party leaders controlled the selection of delegates to the national convention. [2] Nomination politics: The nomination game was then a struggle among the candidates to win the support of state party leaders and their delegations. [3] Rank and File Voters: Primaries were largely beauty contests in which candidates tried to demonstrate their ability to attract votes. [4] Conventions were meaningful. Brokerage politics prevailed in selecting a nominee. 2

A Condensed History of Party Conventions Years in Which There Were Multiple Roll Calls to Select a Nominee Year Democratic Nominee Ballots Whig/Republican Nominee Ballots 1844 James Polk (former Speaker; Gov; TN) 9 Henry Clay (former Sec State; KTY) 1 1848 Lewis Cass (Senator, MICH) 4 Zachary Taylor (General; VA) 4 1852 Franklin Pierce (former Senator; NH) 49 Winfield Scott (General; VA) 53 1856 James Buchanan (Ambassador; PA) 17 John C. Fremont (Senator, CAL) 2 1860 Stephen Douglas (Senator, ILL) 57 Abraham Lincoln (formerly House; ILL) 3 1868 Horatio Seymour (former Gov; NY) 22 Ulysses Grant (General; OH) 1 1876 Samuel Tilden (Gov; NY) 2 Rutherford Hayes (Governor; OH) 7 1880 Winfield Hancock (General; PA) 2 James Garfield (House; OH) 36 1884 Grover Cleveland (Gov; NY) 2 James Blaine (Secretary of State; ME) 4 1888 Grover Cleveland (Incumbent; NY) 1 Benjamin Harrison (former Senate; IND) 8 1896 William Bryan (former House; NEB) 5 William McKinley (Governor; OH) 1 1912 Woodrow Wilson (Gov; NJ) 46 William Taft (Incumbent; OH) 1 1916 Woodrow Wilson (Incumbent; NJ) 1 Charles Hughes (former Gov & Judge; NY) 3 1920 James Cox (Gov; Ohio) 44 Warren Harding (Senator; OH) 10 1924 John Davis (Ambassador; WVA) 103 Calvin Coolidge (VP; Incumbent; MASS) 1 1932 Franklin Roosevelt (Governor; NY) 4 Herbert Hoover (Incumbent; IA) 1 1940 Franklin Roosevelt (Incumbent; NY) 1 Wendell Wilkie (No office; IND) 6 1948 Harry Truman (Incumbent; MO) 1 Thomas Dewey (former Gov; NY) 3 1952 Adlai Stevenson (Governor; ILL) 3 Dwight Eisenhower (General; KS) 1 What Led to the Demise of the Old Way? The Vietnam War and Democratic Nomination Politics in 1968 3

The Democratic National Convention in Chicago, August 1968: Self-Destruction in Prime Time The McGovern-Fraser Commission Creates the New Way (1972-2008) [1] Delegate Selection: Control of State Party Leaders was broken. Delegates (high proportion of the total) must be selected in open caucuses or primaries. Delegate awards to the candidates must reflect their performance in caucuses or primaries. (Democrats use a proportionality rule). The McGovern-Fraser Commission Creates the New Way (1972-2008) [1] Delegate Selection: Control of State Party Leaders was broken. Delegates (high proportion of the total) must be selected in open caucuses or primaries. Delegate awards to the candidates must reflect their performance in caucuses or primaries. (Democrats use a proportionality rule). [2] Binding: Delegates selected as supporters of a candidate must vote for that candidate at the convention. The only exceptions are delegates who are selected as uncommitted and the superdelegates. 4

The McGovern-Fraser Commission Creates the New Way (1972-2008) [1] Delegate Selection: Control of State Party Leaders was broken. Delegates (high proportion of the total) must be selected in open caucuses or primaries. Delegate awards to the candidates must reflect their performance in caucuses or primaries. (Democrats use a proportionality rule). [2] Binding: Delegates selected as supporters of a candidate must vote for that candidate at the convention. The only exceptions are delegates who are selected as uncommitted and the superdelegates. [3] Sequencing and the Marathon: The national parties, in cooperation with the state parties, will schedule the nominating events between January and June of presidential election years. This creates a Marathon of primaries and caucuses. The McGovern-Fraser Commission Creates the New Way (1972-2008) [1] Delegate Selection: Control of State Party Leaders was broken. Delegates (high proportion of the total) must be selected in open caucuses or primaries. Delegate awards to the candidates must reflect their performance in caucuses or primaries. (Democrats use a proportionality rule). [2] Binding: Delegates selected as supporters of a candidate must vote for that candidate at the convention. The only exceptions are delegates who are selected as uncommitted and the superdelegates. [3] Sequencing and the Marathon: The national parties, in cooperation with the state parties, will schedule the nominating events between January and June of presidential election years. This creates a Marathon of primaries and caucuses. [4] Party Conventions. Have ceased to be a brokerage meeting and have become coronations and prime time political talent shows. The Consequences of the New Way [1] Candidate momentum is a product of the marathon Early victories lead to disproportionate increases in campaign fundraising, poll standing, and media attention Jimmy Carter s 1976 campaign is a textbook example 5

The Consequences of the New Way [1] Candidate momentum is a product of the marathon [2] Disproportionate influence exercised by early state primaries and caucuses Iowa (2008) Democrats: 47 of 4,049 delegates 1.4% Republicans: 40 of 2,380 delegates 1.7% 6

New Hampshire (2008) Democrats: 27 of 4,049 delegates; 0.7% Republicans: 24 of 2,380 delegates; 1.0% The Consequences of the New Way [1] Candidate momentum is a product of the marathon [2] Disproportionate influence exercised by early state primaries and caucuses [3] Creates an unofficial primary of fundraising, campaigning, and debates that begins over a year before the first official caucus/primary The Unofficial Primary The Entry of Candidates into the Campaign Date 10/30/2006 11/15/2006 11/30/2006 12/1/2006 12/4/2006 12/11/2006 12/19/2006 12/28/2006 1/3/2007 1/7/2007 1/11/2007 1/12/2007 1/15/2007 1/16/2007 1/20/2007 1/21/2007 1/29/2007 2/5/2007 3/11/2007 Event Representative Duncan Hunter (R, Cal) forms exploratory committee Former governor Tommy Thompson (R, Wisc) forms exploratory committee Governor Tom Vilsack (D, Iowa) announces candidacy Senator Evan Bayh (D, Ind) forms exploratory committee Senator Sam Brownback (R, Neb) forms exploratory committee Representative Dennis Kucinich (D, Ohio) announces candidacy Former governor James Gilmore (R, Va) forms exploratory committee Former Senator John Edwards (D, NC) begins his campaign in New Orleans Former governor Mitt Romney (R, Mass) forms exploratory committee Senator Joe Biden (D, Del) forms exploratory committee Representative Ron Paul (R, Tex) announces candidacy Representative Duncan Hunter (R, Cal) forms exploratory committee Representative Tom Tancredo (R, Col) forms exploratory committee Senator Barack Obama (R, Ill) forms exploratory committee Senator Hillary Clinton (D, NY) forms exploratory committee Governor Bill Richardson (D, NM) forms exploratory committee Former governor Mike Huckabee (R, Ark) forms exploratory committee Former mayor Rudy Giuliani officially declares candidacy Former Senator Fred Thompson (R, Tenn) announces he is considering a run 7

The Unofficial Primary Televised Debates prior to the Official Start of the Campaign Season Date 5/3/2007 5/15/2007 6/3/2007 6/4/2007 6/5/2007 6/28/2007 7/23/2007 8/5/2007 8/7/2007 8/19/2007 9/5/2007 9/16/2007 9/26/2007 9/27/2007 10/9/2007 10/14/2007 10/21/2007 10/21/2007 10/30/2007 11/15/2007 11/28/2007 12/4/2007 12/9/2007 Event Republicans debate at the Reagan Presidential Library (MSNBC) Republicans debate at the University of South Carolina Democrats debate in New Hampshire (CNN) Sojourner s Forum with Clinton and Obama (CNN) Republicans debate in New Hampshire (CNN) Democrats debate at Howard University (CNN) Democrats debate in Charleston (CNN; YouTube & Google) Republican Forum in Des Moines, Iowa (ABC) Democrats debate in Chicago (AFL-CIO; MSNBC) Democrats debate in Des Moines, Iowa (ABC) Republicans debate in New Hampshire (FOX) Univision Republican debate in Coral Gables, Florida Democrats debate at Dartmouth College (NBC) Republicans debate at Dartmouth College (NBC) Republicans debate in Dearborn, Michigan Republicans debate in Manchester, NH (ABC) Republicans debate in Orlando, Florida (FOX) Democrats debate in Manchester, NH (ABC) Democrats debate in Philadelphia, PA (MSNBC/NBC) Democrats debate in Las Vegas, NV (CNN) Republicans debate (CNN; YouTube & Google) Republicans debate in Des Moines (FOX) Univision Republican Debate in Coral Gables, FL The Consequences of the New Way [1] Candidate momentum is a product of the marathon [2] Disproportionate influence exercised by early state primaries and caucuses [3] Creates an unofficial primary of fundraising, campaigning, and debates that begins over a year before the first official caucus/primary [4] The marathon creates a rapid weeding process The 2008 Presidential Election: Dramatis Personae Category Democrats Republicans Tier 1 Hillary Clinton,U.S. Senator, New York Barack Obama, U.S. Senator, Illinois John Edwards, Former Senator, North Carolina & VP Candidate (suspended campaign, 1/30/08) John McCain, U.S. Senator, Arizona Mitt Romney, Former Governor of Massachusetts (suspended campaign, 2/7/08) Rudy Giuliani, Former Mayor of New York City (withdrew, 1/30/08) Tier 2 Mike Gravel, Former Senator, Alaska Mike Huckabee, former Governor of Arkansas Ron Paul, U.S. Representative, Texas Dennis Kucinich. U.S. Representative, Ohio Alan Keyes, (withdrew, 1/23/2008) Bill Richardson, Governor, New Mexico Duncan Hunter, U.S. Representative, California (withdrew, 1/10/2008) (withdrew, 1/19/2008) Joe Biden, U.S. Senator, Delaware Fred Thompson, Former Senator from Tennessee & Actor (withdrew, 1/3/2008) (withdrew, 1/22/08) Christopher Dodd, U.S. Senator, Connecticut Tom Tancredo, U.S. Representative, Colorado (withdrew, 1/3/2008) (withdrew, 12/20/2007) Tom Vilsack, Governor of Iowa Sam Brownback, U.S. Senator, Kansas (withdrew, 2/23/07) (withdrew, 10/19/07) Tommy Thompson, Former Governor of Wisconsin (withdrew, 10/12/07 after Iowa straw poll) Jim Gilmore, Former Governor of Virginia (withdrew, 7/14/2007) Declined to Mark Warner, Governor of Virginia George Allen, after 11/07 defeat for reelection to the Senate Run Russell Feingold, Senator, Wisconsin Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the House & U.S. Evan Bayh, Senator, Indiana Representative from Georgia Note: The 2008 election is the first presidential contest since 1952 not involving an incumbent president OR a sitting vice president as a candidate. 8

The Consequences of the New Way [1] Candidate momentum is a product of the marathon [2] Disproportionate influence exercised by early state primaries and caucuses [3] Creates an unofficial primary of fundraising, campaigning, and debates that begins over a year before the first official caucus/primary [4] The marathon creates a rapid weeding process [5] This has prompted states to frontload the schedule The Consequences of the New Way [1] Candidate momentum is a product of the marathon [2] Disproportionate influence exercised by early state primaries and caucuses [3] Creates an unofficial primary of fundraising, campaigning, and debates that begins over a year before the first official caucus/ primary [4] The marathon creates a rapid weeding process [5] This has prompted states to frontload the schedule [6] The process contributes to the polarization of American politics 9

Why men are Republicans Polarization: An illustration 10

The General Election? OR 11

The Electoral College A Red vs. Blue Nation? 12

Consider Closeness 13