Reenie's Campaigns and Nominations Test Quizlet
what did the FEC controversially rule in 2004?
527 groups are not subjected to contribution restrictions as long as their political messages did not explicitly endorse candidates ("Vote for" and "vote against")
what percentage of adult citizens vote in the presidential election?
60%
how many taxpayers check off the federal income tax return box?
7%
how big is the sophomore surge?
8-10%
chance of incumbents being reelected in congress
90%
in a typical presidential race, how much of the vote does the winner typically get?
<55%
primary
A ballot vote in which citizens select a party's nominee for the general election.
mcgovern-fraser commission
A commission formed at the 1968 Democratic convention in response to demands for reform by minority groups and others who sought better representation.
political action committee (PAC)
A committee set up by a corporation, labor union, or interest group that raises and spends campaign money from voluntary donations
caucus
A meeting of local party members to choose party officials or candidates for public office and to decide the platform.
direct mail
A method of raising money for a political cause or candidate, in which information and requests for money are sent to people whose names appear on lists of those who have supported similar views or candidates in the past.
national party convention
A national meeting of delegates elected in primaries, caucuses, or state conventions who assemble once every four years to nominate candidates for president and vice president, ratify the party platform, elect officers, and adopt rules.
party platform
A political party's statement of its goals and policies for the next four years. The platform is drafted prior to the party convention by a committee whose members are chosen in rough proportion to each candidate's strength. It is the best formal statement of a party's beliefs.
most recent campaign finance act
BCRA(Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act)
hydraulic theory of money and politics
Money always finds a way around legal obstacles
what does success in the nomination game require?
Money, media attention, momentum
superdelegates
National party leaders who automatically get a delegate slot at the Democratic national party convention.
where does the primary season begin?
New Hampshire
501(c) groups
Tax-exempt organizations that can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money to promote "social welfare." They may advocate for or against candidates, but political activities cannot become their primary purpose. They can keep their donors and names of members secret.
examples of soft money
distributing campaign material at the grassroots level, generic advertising to promote the party
campaign contributions
donations that are made directly to a candidate or a party and that must be reported to the FEC
what did the dc court of appeals rule in speechnow.org vs. FEC?
donations to a PAC that makes only independent expenditures could not be limited; made it possible for a PAC that just expresses its views to collect and spend unlimited money
Malapportionment
drawing the boundaries of legislative districts so that they are unequal in population
what did cohen and his coauthors argue?
during the invisible primary, key elected officials in a party often unite around a candidate that they find most acceptable and give a crucial boost to their candidates
effect of the invisible primary, according to cohen & co
elite of the party often set the agenda during the nomination
what is one of the first things a presidential candidate does?
establish a website
how often does a reapportionment occur?
every 10 years
what advantage did obama have in politics?
experience as a community organizer that give him insight into how to mobilize activists to attend a caucus
what did the study of media coverage in 2008 find?
far more stories dealt with the horse race and strategy than policy and candidates' public records
result of mccutheon vs. FEC (2014)
federal candidates and political parties can band together and raise money from the same individuals through joint fundraising committees
what did the 1974 federal election campaign act establish?
federal election committee (FEC)
only presidential candidate who applied for federal funds in 2016
former governor o'malley
advantages of an incumbent running again
franking privileges, trips home, know how to run a personal campaign using radio and TV, trips home
main problem with rising costs of campaigning
fundraising takes up so much time
effect of obama's victory in iowa
gave him the edge over clinton, shocked the political world, landed him on the covers of major weekly magazines, and led the top of all the news broadcasts
why are a research staff and policy advisers necessary?
give candidates information to keep them up to date
who do voters prefer as president?
governors or military leaders
why were party conventions once dramatic?
great speeches, dark-horse candidates, and candidates fought to win the nomination
why is caucus turnout lower than primaries?
greater time commitment
what can a good press secretary do?
help reporters make their deadlines with stories that the campaign would like to see reported
what did many states decide to do for the democratic delegate selection procedure?
hold a primary
what sells newspapers or interests television views?
human interest angle
Example of Malapportionment
if one single-member district has 10,000 voters and another has 100,000 voters, voters in the former district have ten times the influence, per person, over the governing body.
minor-party federal funding exception
if you are minor-party candidate and receive at least 5% of the vote during the last national election, you may receive federal funding in the next election
what do the justices believe about the citizens united decision?
in 100k pages of the record, there were no direct examples of votes for independent expenditures; independent expenditures do not lead to corruption and expenditures were protected under the constitution as free speech
examples of doctrine of sufficiency
in 1990, wellstone beat an incumbent senator; in 2016, trump won even though he was outspent by clinton
example of frontloading
in 2008, 2/3 of delegates were chosen within 6 weeks of the iowa caucus
example of late primaries' irrelevancy
in 2016, by the time california and new jersey voted, trump had already wrapped up his party's nomination
what was the ruling of mcconnell vs. federal election commission (2003)?
in favor of the ban on unlimited contributions given to political parties, justified by the government's interest in preventing corruption
when did the cost of campaigning skyrocket?
in the early 1970s
justification for the citizens united v. FEC
independent expenditures do not lead to, or create the appearance of quid pro quo corruption, free speech
where do candidates spend more time in?
iowa (because it's the first-in-the-nation)
disproportionate attention to early contests
iowa and new hampshire play a key and disproportionate role in building momentum, even though they are not the most heavily populated states
wedge issues
issues that sharply divide the public.
what do critics of the FEC say?
it is often too locked up in partisan stalemate
importance of the new hampshire primary
it is traditionally first
what do critics of super PACs argue?
it represents a threat to limits on campaign contributions designed to minimize corruption in politics; the line between a candidate's campaign and super PAC has been blurred
when was the survey by the pew research center for the people & the press taken?
january 2016
when do individual state parties choose delegates?
january through june of the election year
who picked the 2004 democratic convention keynote speaker?
kerry
first highlight of a party convention
keynote speaker; a dynamic speaker outlines the party's basic principles and touts the nominee-to-be
why is a campaign counsel important?
legal assistance is essential to ensure compliance with federal regulation laws of campaign financing
problem with lack of formal coordination between a super PAC and a candidate's campaign
makes super PAC ads ineffectively
effect of 527 groups
many donors who had given big soft money contributions gave big donations to 527 groups
criticism of role of money in caucuses and primaries
many people think that money plays too large a role in american presidential elections
who was the first person to effectively run for president using the internet?
mccain (in 2000)
who wanted to remove large soft money campaign contributions?
mccain and feingold
what court case overturned the 1974 restriction on spending?
mccutheon v. FEC (2014)
where does the "free" attention from the news come from?
media events
during the invisible primary, who do candidates work with?
media, the political elite, and attentive portion of the public
allegedly who is the new kingmaker?
media; the press decides who has momentum at any given moment and labels candidates as winners or losers
who, other than the antiwar faction, wanted a more open process of convention delegate selection?
minorities, women, youth, and other groups that had not been properly represented
the big mo
momentum; a key in campaign success, especially if a candidate must beat predictions
what are primaries and caucuses considered?
more than just an endurance contest; proving grounds to do better than expected
exception to the lack of control of news coverage
most campaigns have press aides that feed news releases to reporters
what weakens campaigns' impact on voters?
most people pay little attention to campaigns, long-term factors influence voting behavior regardless of what happens in the campaign, and incumbents have an advantage because of name recognition and a track record
ideas for reforming the nomination process
national primary or a series of regional primaries
how much money was raised in 2000 through the 1979 loophole?
nearly half a billion
how long do most advanced industrialized countries' campaigns last?
no more than two months according to custom/law
two types of campaigns
nomination campaigns and election campaigns
Who was the 2004 democratic keynote speaker?
obama
formally nominating a candidate for president
one of each candidate's supporters gives a speech, string of seconding speeches, roll call of states, and the chair of each state's delegation announces their votes
when does a donation to a 501(c) group have to be reported?
only when a donor gives money SPECIFICALLY for a political ad
what did the 1998 study find?
out of 230,000 candidate ads, ones that emphasized policy outnumbered personal image by a 6-to-1 ratio
how much did perot spend on his 1992 campaign?
over $60 million
how much did trump spend on his 2016 campaign?
over $65 million
how many contributions via the internet did obama receive in 2008 and 2012?
over 1 million
how many email addresses were on the 2012 obama campaign?
over 13 million
how many people donated to sanders's 2016 campaign?
over 5 million
in a typical house race, how much of the vote does the incumbent typically get?
over 60%
how much of tv coverage has been devoted to the new hampshire primary?
over a fifth
why is there no open disagreement on issues?
party leaders fear negative publicity
party bosses
party leaders, usually in an urban district, who exercised tight control over electioneering and patronage
prominent politicians find it difficult to take time out from their duties to run
rigors of running often force those who are already in public office to partially neglect their elected duties
example of current political duties being a hindrance
rubio missed many roll call votes in the senate
who set a new record in the primaries for democratic donations?
sanders
who chaired the committee of inquiry (two people)?
senator mcgovern and representative fraser
what does a campaign staff of volunteers do?
send out mail, ring doorbells, and other small tasks
what does running for president demand in terms of endurance?
sleep deprivation, plane rides, junk food, lack of regular exercise, and stress
what do critics of the citizens united decision argue?
special interest groups can corrupt the electoral process
what happens at a national convention?
state delegations cast their votes
what were the two methods that delegates could be selected in?
state-run primary election or an open meeting at the local level
effect of high media attention on early contests
states moved their primaries up in the calendar
what happened in buckley v. valeo (1976)?
struck down expenditure limits (candidate's own money on campaign)
what did hillygus and shields find?
substantial number of voters are persuadable because they disagree with their preferred candidate on at least one issue; demonstrate how politicians use wedge issues to draw supporters
what did bartels find?
substantive political appeal may overwhelm the impact of momentum
only remaining vestige of the old system
superdelegates
what can super PACs do?
support a campaign, buy TV commercials and other assets
what can congressional members do?
take credit for things (like new highways or federal funding for projects), deny that they're responsible for DC, ride on the coattails of a president
what was supported to help pay a substantial part of presidential campaigns?
taxpayer dollars
most prevalent means used by candidates to reach voters
television
major item in a campaign budget
television advertising
example of gerrymandering
texas
what did the supreme court rule in 1964?
the constitution requires that districts be drawn so that, as close as possible one person's vote would be worth as much as another's
Gerrymandering
the drawing of legislative district boundaries to benefit a party, group, or incumbent
vast majority of delegates from 1830s-1960s
the elite (elected officials and heads of the local party organizations)
campaign strategy
the master game plan candidates lay out to guide their electoral campaign
what act raised the limit for individual contributions?
the mccain-feingold act (2002)
what did jacobson show?
the more incumbents spend, the worse they do; incumbents who face a tough opponent must raise more money
franking privileges
the privilege of sending mail without payment of postage. Congress gets this privilege
4 problems because of gerrymandering and malapportionment
the total size of the House, allocating seats, determining the size of congressional districts, determining the shape of districts
only restriction on 501(c) groups
they cannot spend more than half their funds on political activities
why did many donors donate to the obama campaign?
they received occasional email requests
effect of the mcgovern-fraser commission
they wrote new rules to make the democratic party conventions more representative
what is the purpose of the federal election commission?
to create a repository for campaign finance reports and enforce limits on campaign contributions
most important goal of any media campaign
to get attention
what did reformers want?
to let people vote for their preferred candidate and then bind delegates to vote for that candidate at the national convention
why are today's conventions scripted?
to present the party in its best light
goal of the nomination game
to win the support of a majority of delegates at the national party convention
what do strategies have to address?
tone, theme, timing, targeted voters (TTTTV)
what did patterson and mcclure find?
viewers learned a substantial amount about candidates' issue stances from watching their ads on tv
who pioneered the mass mailing list?
viguerie
why are primaries and caucuses not representative?
voters tend to be older and more affluent than average
what encouraged campaign finance reform?
watergate scandal and rising campaign costs
effect of the high media exposure on iowa caucuses
well-known campaigns collapse due to poor showings, while some candidates have received tremendous boosts
when did george h.w. bush say "the big mo"?
when he scored a surprise victory over reagan in iowa
what did party bosses control?
who went to the convention and how the state's delegates voted
who proposed a national primary and when?
wilson in 1913
how do you get "mo" going?
win a bigger percentage of the vote than expected
what did obama's campaign do in 2008?
win the majority of delegates in every caucus
when does primary season begin?
winter
where was feingold from?
wisconsin (D)
major component of the invisible primary
wooing of support from elected officials, top fundraisers, and skilled political aides
reasoning behind the buckley v. valeo ruling
you can't corrupt yourself
who are typically campaign volunteers, and why?
young people because they are more likely to have energy and freedom
how many people watched trump's 2016 republican convention speech?
32 million
how many votes are required for the FEC for any action?
4
how much does direct mail cost?
40 cents for every dollar raised
how big is the house?
435
"orchestra pit" theory
"If it bleeds, it leads" media mentality.
what did baby bush say about the republican convention in 2000?
"The convention system provides a system of rewards for hardworking, grass-roots people who end up being delegates. I view it as an opportunity for these people to go back home, energized to help me get elected."
what did obama say about conventions?
"a weeklong infomercial for the party and its nominee."
what did the mcgovern-fraser commission find?
"meaningful participation of Democratic voters in the choice of their presidential nominee was often difficult or costly, sometimes completely illusory, and, in not a few instances, impossible."
what did patterson stress about the media campaign?
"today's presidential campaign is essentially a mass media campaign."
what was the initial limit for individual contributions to candidates in an election?
$1k
what was the limit for individual contributions to presidential and congressional candidates in 2016?
$2.7k
what was the 2002 limit of contributions to political parties?
$25k, indexed to rise with inflation
how much did the democratic party raise in soft money in 2000?
$32 million
what was the limit on contributions to political parties in 2016?
$33.4k
what's the limit on interest group donations?
$5k
cost of the 2012 campaigns for presidency and congress
$6.3 billion
what percent of adult citizens participate in caucuses?
5%
what did the new rules from the mcgovern-fraser include?
1. party leaders could no longer handpick the convention delegates secretly 2. all delegate selection were required to be open 3. states were told that delegates had to be selected via a method that everyone could participate in
criticisms of the marathon campaign
1. Disproportionate attention goes to the early caucuses and primaries 2. prominent politicians find it difficult to take time out from their duties to run 3. money plays too big a role in the caucuses and primaries 4. participation in primaries and caucuses is low and unrepresentative 5. the system gives too much power to the media.
frontloading's two problems
1. SPEED: with so many delegates being chosen so quickly, there may be a rush to judgment before the public can learn about the candidates 2. IRRELEVANCY: states that have held late primaries have proved to be irrelevant given that one candidate had already secured the nomination
what are the two ways to contribute money to campaigns?
1. campaign contributions to specific candidates or parties 2.donations to independent expenditure groups
what must candidates do to organize their campaigns effectively?
1. get a campaign manager 2. get a fundraiser 3. get a campaign counsel 4. hire media and campaign consultants 5. assemble a campaign staff 6. plan the logistics 7. get a research staff and policy advisers 8. hire a pollster 9. get a good press secretary 10. establish a website
what determines media coverage (two factors)?
1. how candidates use their advertising budget 2. the "free" attention they get as news makers
what threshold do delegates to the platform committee disagree with the majority have to reach to do something?
20%
what did the people & press survey find?
20% of americans had learned about the campaign over the past week from the candidates' websites, apps, or emails; 52% learned something from facebook and 43% from twitter
example of position issue
2004 issue over social security: bush wanted private savings accounts, kerry did not
what percent of adult citizens vote in presidential primaries?
25%
how many seats are reserved for democrats and republicans on the FEC?
3 each
how many people watched the 2016 super bowl?
112 million
in 2016, how much of the democratic party convention was made up of superdelegates?
15%
when were political party conventions invented?
1830s
when did congress set the size of the house?
1911
last time a convention took more than one ballot to decide a nomination
1952
what inspired reform in the selection of convention delegates?
1968 Democratic convention
how long has the iowa caucus been the first caucus?
1972
when did congress pass the federal election campaign act?
1974
what limited interest group donations to campaigns?
1974 reforms via regulations on political action committees
last time there was doubt to who would win at a convention
1976: ford edged out reagan
what percentage of adult citizens vote in iowa's caucus?
20%
soft money
Campaign contributions unregulated by federal or state law, usually given to parties and party committees to help fund general party activities.
effect of the federal election campaign act
Candidates reported... 1. who contributed money to their campaign 2. how the campaign funds have been spent Also... 3. limited campaign contributions
where was the 1968 democratic convention?
Chicago
How did Super PAC's come about?
DC court of appeals ruled that donations to a PAC that makes only independent expenditures cannot be limited
examples of 527 groups
DONT NEED TO KNOW
how many states left the presidential choice of conventional delegates to party elites through the 1960s?
DONT NEED TO KNOW
how much did at&t, american federation of state, county, and municipal employees give in 2000?
DONT NEED TO KNOW
what does congress want to change the restriction on 501(c) groups to?
DONT NEED TO KNOW
who donated $7 million and what did they do?
DONT NEED TO KNOW
how much money did hillary clinton's joint fundraising-committee receive from individual donations?
DONT NEED TO KNOW THIS
independent expenditures
Expenses on behalf of a political message that are made by groups that are uncoordinated with any candidate's campaign.
who regulates 501(c) groups?
IRS
527 groups
Independent political groups that are not subject to contribution restrictions because they do not directly seek the election of particular candidates. Section 527 of the tax code specifies that contributions to such groups must be reported to the IRS.
what was the federal election campaign act?
Placed legal limits on the amount someone could donate to a campaign fund. Prevents wealthy people from "buying" elections.
doctrine of sufficiency
Spend enough money to get a message across to compete effectively
position papers
developed for political candidates to identify their position on a large number of political topics
most basic complaint about money and politics
direct link between dollars spent and votes received
nomination
The official endorsement of a candidate for office by a political party. Generally, success in the nomination game requires momentum, money, and media attention.
invisible primary
The period before any votes are cast when candidates compete to win early support from the elite of the party and to create a positive first impression of their leadership skills.
selective perception
The phenomenon that people's beliefs often guide what they pay the most attention to and how they interpret events.
examples of candidates bouncing back
bush bounced back to win big states in 2000 against mccain; clinton was able to bounce back in 2016 after losing new hampshire to sanders by 22%
what happened at the 1968 democratic party's convention?
demonstrators against the war in asia (*not just vietnam anymore*) fought daley's police in a "police riot" (they were beat up)
frontloading
The recent tendency of states to hold primaries early in the calendar in order to capitalize on media attention.
how can money be collected for presidential candidates?
a $3 voluntary check-off box on federal income tax returns
what did viguerie create?
a computerized list of names and addresses of hundreds of thousands of individuals who contributed to conservative causes
who was viguerie?
a conservative fundraiser
what does campaign coverage seem to be?
a constant interplay between hard news about what candidates say/do and the human interest angle
what did the antiwar faction win?
a special committee to review the party's delegate selection procedures
what is an incumbent's strategy?
defend
how is the vice presidential candidate chosen?
delegates vote for whomever the presidential nominee recommends
how long does a presidential candidacy need to last before the election?
about a year and a half
how long were independent expenditures by 527 groups partially restricted?
about eight years
who are the policy advisers usually?
academics (NOT creative and driven @ Hanna)
effect of viguerie's invention
accumulation of mailing lists enables candidates to pick an issue and write to a list of people concerned about that issue, making targeted fundraising easier and more cost effective
who writes position papers?
advisors
where did 527 groups get its name?
after the section of the federal tax code that governs these political groups
how can a candidate access taxpayer funds?
agreeing with restrictions on overall spending
advance workers
aides who handle the complicated details of candidate scheduling and see to it that events are well publicized and attended
who came up with the "orchestra pit" theory of politics?
ailes, founder of fox news
what ends a party convention?
all party leaders come out to congratulate the ticket, raise their hands, and bid the delegates farewell
what created the 1979 loophole?
an amendment to the original act that made it easier for political parties to raise money for voter registration drives and party-building activities
sophomore surge
an increase in the votes congressional candidates usually get when they first run for reelection
position issue
an issue about which the public is divided and rival candidates or political parties adopt different policy positions
valence issue
an issue about which the public is united and rival candidates or political parties adopt similar positions in hopes that each will be thought to best represent those widely shared beliefs.
where was mccain from?
arizona (R)
how much does an american election cost per person?
as much as a movie purchase on iTunes or Amazon
how much of the total budget for a presidential or us senate campaign is allotted to campaign commercials?
at least half
what is a challenger's strategy?
attack
what did the mccain-feingold act do?
ban soft money contributions and set limits
how do voters differentiate candidates?
based off personal qualifications, characters, and intelligence
why is a campaign manager important?
bears the day-to-day responsibility for setting the tone of a campaign, keeps the candidate from getting bogged down in details
what did multiple-ballot contests used to involve?
behind-the-scenes manuevering and dealing-making
what can disagreeing delegates do?
bring an alternative minority plank to the convention floor for debate
what was the first loophole of the 1974 campaign reform act?
buckley v. valeo (1976)
how would a regional primary be organized?
by time zone
what is news coverage disproportionately devoted to?
campaign strategies, speculation about what's next, poll results, and other aspects of the campaign game
election campaigns
campaigns between the two nominees
nomination campaigns
campaigns for party nominations
Joint fundraising committees
can be created by two or more political entities to share the costs of fundraising, and split the proceeds; participants can't take any more more money from a donor than they could if the money was given directly, but now donors can write a very large check
what does the FEC do?
candidates and parties have to file regular detailed contribution reports with the commission, which it posts online
why are media and campaign consultants needed?
candidates don't have time to plan ad campaigns, contract for buttons and bumper stickers, and buy tv time and newspaper space
how did the opening of the presidential nomination process change politics?
candidates now have to compete for votes, delegates attained their ability now due to their preferred candidate's ability to pull in votes
effect of staying in office on policy making
candidates try to do as much as possible for people back home, serve on particular committees so states have better chances of getting new bridges and federal grants
what did boatright argue?
candidates who use the web to raise money can raise larger sums from small donors than traditionally the case in case in campaigns; they can give donors an idea of how their money will be used and more easily resolicit donors
what do campaign websites typically include?
candidates' stances, videos of speeches, schedules of upcoming events, donation links
who won iowa in 1976?
carter
why is money so controversial in campaigns?
concern that wealthy campaign contributors are buying special influence over public policy decisions
what do pollsters do?
conduct opinion research to tell candidates how the voters view them
ruling of citizens united v. FEC (2010)
corporations and unions can spend as much as they like to promote their political views, as long as they don't coordinate their message with any candidate's campaign
effect of superdelegates
could overturn people's verdict by giving the nomination to the candidate who received fewer popular votes
at early stages in a campaign, what is it about?
creating images for the rest of the country to see candidates as front-runners
in 2012, what did the democratic party do?
cut the convention to three days for the first time
what was obama's 2012 campaign the first-of-its-kind to do?
dedicate to high-tech work, such as setting up twitter feeds, facebook pages, and other internet applications
police riot
police beat people instead of arresting them
super PACs
political action committees established to make independent expenditures
what do critics of political ads say?
political ads tend to emphasize style over substance, image over information
greatest impact on the internet on campaigns
political fundraising
two kinds of campaign issues
position or valence issue
what did the mccain-feingold act increase individual contributions to (from 1k to 2k)?
presidential and congressional candidates
grand finale of a national convention
presidential candidate's acceptance speech
effect of mccain-feingold act on corporations and unions
prevented them from using their general treasury funds to pay for electioneering communications in the last 60 days of federal campaigns and the last 30 days of federal primaries
what determines party nominees?
primaries and caucuses
"one man, one vote"
principle meaning that election districts would have to be redrawn to provide equal representation for all of states citizens
what are political ads designed to do?
prompt people's thinking, heighten conflict and employ a hard-sell approach
what did bradley smith report?
proportion of the nation's GDP spent on political activity is .05%
solution to time-commitment of fundraising
public financing of federal campaigns
what should a campaign strategy do?
raise money, garner media attention, win supporters
who promoted the presidential primary early on?
reformers who wanted to take nominations out of the hands of party bosses
three effects that campaigns have on voters
reinforcement, activation, and conversion: campaigns can reinforce voters' preferences, activate voters, and convert voters