Voting for Congress The Statics and Dynamics of Party Ideology.

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Voting for Congress The Statics and Dynamics of Party Ideology

Transcript of Voting for Congress The Statics and Dynamics of Party Ideology.

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Voting for Congress

The Statics and Dynamics of Party Ideology

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Learning Objectives

• Analyze the theories of why people vote and apply them to the 2012 Election.

• Evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of how presidential and congressional elections are financed.

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WHY PARTIES MOVE?

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Party Movement

• When do parties change ideologies

• When do the diverge?

• When do they resemble each other

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Where To Build a Bar in Central Texas?

Here… in Bastrop

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Or Here?

6th Street

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Why Do you See These two across the Street From Each Other?

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Why Does This, Appear next to This?

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Why Do We Have?

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THESE STRATEGIES APPLY TO POLITICAL PARTIES

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Lets Apply this to Ideology

• Here is a distribution with 0 representing policy liberalism, and 100 representing policy conservativism

• A and B represent political parties

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Where Parties Should Go in A Normal Distribution

They Move To the Center

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Why go to the Center

• You Cant leapfrog the other party

• More voters

• At what point do you stop moving to the Center?

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When do you stop?

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The Problem of Being Too Moderate

• A Third Party could grab your flank

• Too many of your people stay home

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STAYING PUT

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What About A Bimodal Distribution?

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Party Polarization

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One Hump is often Bigger 2010

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In 2008 it was the other way

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MULTI PARTY SYSTEMS

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Polygamy

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A polymodal System

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A Polymodal System

• In PR systems, 1 party for Each hump

• How might this differ in a Single Member District System?

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In Germany

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Party Movement in Multiparty Systems

• Stay Put!• Distinguish yourself from your enemies

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How our Parties Deal with the Humps

• Social and Economic Conservatives (within the GOP)

• The Many Humps within the Democratic Party

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WHY DO WE HAVE A TWO PARTY SYSTEM

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How Many Parties in Majority Elections

• Duverger’s Law

– Mechanical Effect

– Psychological Effect

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The Kinds of Parties

• Those who are there to win

• Those that are there to influence

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How many parties in a PR system?

• As many parties as humps exist

• Depends on the threshold

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NEW PARTIES

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Getting New Parties in Our System

• Existing parties cant jump over each other

• New Parties come from– Between the gap– On the fringe

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How can Third Parties Win?

A Shift In Franchise…. The electorate changes!

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Splitting the Vote

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Parties Will often Try To be Ambiguous, Why?

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Voting For Congress

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Goals of Congressperson

• The Primary Goal is to Get Elected

• The Next goal is to get re-elected(Mayhew, 1974)

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PARTISANSHIP AND TURNOUT

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Lower turnout in Congressional Elections

• Lower Excitement

• Lower Salience

• Lower Information

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Partisanship is Most Important

• The biggest factor in Congressional election

• Even in open seat elections

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Safe Seats

• Seat Maximization through Gerrymandering

• Majority Minority Districts

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Residential Self Selection

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INCUMBENCYMajor Factor 2

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Incumbency

• Can Eclipse Partisanship in some places

• A resource that provides many benefits

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Incumbency

• The incumbent dominates the discourse

• The incumbent has the advantages

• It is the Incumbent’s seat to lose

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Incumbent Benefit - Money

• Attract Money at Higher Rates

• The War Chest

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Incumbent Benefit- Name Recognition

• We Vote For Who We Know

• What can Incumbents Do?

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Benefit 3 – Weak Challengers

• Run against Losers

• Scare off Good Challengers

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Lose<Not Run<Win

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Voluntary Retirements

• When candidates leave office, rather than run for re-election.

• Why people Retire?

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HOW INCUMBENTS CAN LOSE

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Stop Playing the Game

• Get too Old

• Become inattentive

• Scandal

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Strategic Challengers can Alter This

• They run when national trends favor their party

• They have local advantages as well

• They also have the most to lose!

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How Strategic Challengers Change Campaigns

• Attract Money

• Can turn National Issues into Local Ones

• Are Quality Challengers as Well

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What is a Quality Challenger

• A person who has formerly/currently held elective office

• Name Recognition, Access to Money, a constituuency

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INCUMBENCY IN THE HOUSE AND SENATE

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House Incumbency

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Senate Incumbency

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House vs Senate Incumbents

• Why are Senators more vulnerable?