chapter 6: voters & voter behaviors

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CHAPTER 6 Voters & Voter Behavior

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Page 1: Chapter 6: Voters & Voter Behaviors

CHAPTER 6

Voters & Voter Behavior

Page 2: Chapter 6: Voters & Voter Behaviors

PP. 152-155

Chapter 6.1: The Right to Vote

Page 3: Chapter 6: Voters & Voter Behaviors

Expansion of the Electorate

At first suffrage was only granted to white male property owners 1 in 15 adult white males

Today the electorate is 230 million + Restrictions have been taken away & federal government has

taken control of suffrage laws

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Extending the Suffrage

Stage 1=States eliminated religious requirements & property-owning requirements

Stage 2=15th Amendment (1870) allowed African American males to vote Still difficult for many blacks to vote for various reasons—poll

taxes, literacy tests, violence

Stage 3=19th Amendment (1920) allowed women to vote nationally

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Extending the Suffrage

Stage 4=Civil rights movement, 1960s Civil rights acts Voting Rights Act of 1965 23rd Amendment (1961) allowed voters of Washington, DC to

vote in presidential elections 24th Amendment (1964) eliminated poll taxes

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Extending the Suffrage

Stage 5=26th Amendment (1971), no state can set the minimum age for voting at more than 18 years

Vietnam War era

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The Powers to Set Voting Qualifications

Constitution does not give the federal government power to set voting qualifications

Constitution does set 5 restrictions 1. If allowed to vote in state elections, you can vote in national

elections as well 2. Cannot be denied vote based on race or color 3. Cannot be denied vote based on gender 4. No state cannot require a payment of a tax in order to vote 5. No state can deny a person the age of 18 or older the right to

vote

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What’s Next?

Should 16-year-olds be allowed to vote? http://prospect.org/article/making-sweet-sixteen-even-

sweeter

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PP. 156-163

Chapter 6.2: Voter Qualifications

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Universal Requirements

1. Citizenship—foreign-born resident who are not yet citizens are denied the right to vote

2. Residence—one must be a legal resident of the state in which he/she wishes to cast a ballot Various lengths of residency, some states require 30 days,

some less, some none at all Nearly every state prohibits transients from voting

3. Age—no state can set the minimum age for voting in any election at more than 18 18-20 y.o.’s historically have low voter turnout

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Registration

Process of voter identification, meant to prevent fraudulent voting

Gives election officials a list of qualified votersAlso used to identify voters with a party & provide

eligibility to take part in closed primaries

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Registration

Requirements: Typically a voter must provide: name, age, place or birth,

present address, length of residence Logged by a local official Registered until he/she moves, dies, convicted of a felony,

moved to a mental institution Purging of voter lists done every 2-4 years

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Registration

Controversies: Some argue that registration requirements should be dropped;

argue that it hurts voter turnout Others argue that it prevents fraud

Where is the line where it is so easy to vote that fraud is encouraged, and it is so difficult that legitimate voting is discouraged?

The U.S. is the only democratic country in which each person decides whether or not to vote

“Motor Voter Act” effective in 1995 Citizens can register to vote when renewing a driver’s license

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Registration

Voter ID laws Require people to prove identity when registering to vote Usually sponsored by Republican-controlled states Intended to prevent fraud, but opponents say they are

designed to prevent certain groups from voting Elderly, disabled, poor, & minority groups

What about voter ID laws? Fair or unfair? http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-

fix/wp/2013/03/26/the-countrys-voter-id-laws-in-1-map/

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Literacy Tests

Today no state has voter qualifications based on literacy

Aimed at limiting certain groups from voting: Irish Americans, African Americans

Grandfather clausesSC banned literacy tests as voter requirement in

1970 Oregon v. Mitchell

*See “Can You Answer These?” on p. 162*

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Tax Payments

Property ownership was once a common voter requirement

Some state required voters to pay a special tax or a poll tax Still in use in AL, MS, TX, & VA in 1966 despite the 24th

Amendment

Taxing requirements are now gone

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Persons Denied the Vote

People in mental institutions and/or people who are found to be mentally incompetent

People convicted of serious crimes In many states convicted felons can regain the right to vote

Some states do not allow people dishonorably discharged from the military to vote

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PP. 164-168

Chapter 6.3: Suffrage & Civil Rights

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Terms to Know

15th AmendmentGerrymanderingCivil Rights Act of 1964Voting Rights Act of 1965

*See timeline on pp. 166-167*

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PP. 170-178

Chapter 6.4:Voter Behavior

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Nonvoting

Only 61% of eligible voters voted in 2008 election; roughly 57% in 2012

Typically rates are much lower in off-year elections“Nonvoting voters”

For example: vote for president, but not for members of Congress

“Ballot fatigue,” voters exhaust patience/knowledge as they work down the ballot

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Why People Do Not Vote

“Cannot voters”—resident aliens, ill/physically disabled, traveling suddenly/unexpectedly, mentally disabled, prisoners

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Why People Do Not Vote

Actual Nonvoters—Many are convinced their vote makes no difference Many in this group lack political efficacy

Political efficacy—one’s own influence or effectiveness on politics Cumbersome procedures, long lines, bad weather, etc. “Time-zone fallout”—discourages voting on West Coast Lack of interest, indifference

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Voters Nonvoters

High incomeEducatedLong-time residentsSense of party

identificationArea where there is

competition between parties

YoungerLess educationLower payRural localesMen, more so than

women

Voters vs. Nonvoters

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Voting Behavior

What we know about voter behavior comes from 3 sources:

1. Results of previous elections2. The field of survey research

Gallup Organization & Pew Research

3. Political Socialization The process by which people gain their political attitudes &

opinions

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Voting Behavior

Sociological factors that influence voters:1. Income & occupation

Lower=Democrat Higher=Republican Professionals w/ higher incomes tend to vote for GOP

candidates Manual laborers tend to vote for Democrats

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Voting Behavior

Education College graduates vote for Republicans in higher percentages

than high school grads

Gender Women tend to favor Democrats—5-10% Men often give GOP same edge

“Gender gap” Topics men & women tend to vote differently on:

Abortion, health care, social welfare programs, military involvement

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Voting Behavior

Age Younger voters prefer Democrats Older voters prefer Republicans

In ‘08 Obama won 66% of the 30 & under vote

Religion Protestants prefer the GOP Catholics & Jews vote for Democrats

‘08 election supported these trends 55% of voters that went to church once/week voted for McCain in

‘08

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Voting Behavior

Race/Ethnicity African Americans tend to vote for Democrats

Had voted for Republicans from 1860s to 1930s Why the shift?

Latinos typically favor Democrats

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Voting Behavior

Geography Post-Civil War the South had voted for Democrats

Now the South is controlled by the GOP States that have most consistently been Republican:

Idaho, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming ‘64 was the last time AK, ID, KS, NE, ND, OK, SD, UT, WY voted

for a Democratic presidential candidate (LBJ) Democrats have controlled New England over past two decades

Voters in small cities & rural areas tend to vote Republican Urban residents prefer Democrats

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Presidential Elections—1980-2012

What trends do you see?Which states always vote the same?Which states tend to go back & forth?http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/showelection.php?

year=1980

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Voter Behavior

Family/Groups Typically 9 out of 10 married couples have the same political

leanings As many as 2 out of 3 voters follow the political attachments of

their parents A person’s group associations reinforce the opinions he/she

already has

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Voting Behavior

Psychological Factors (perception of politics):Party Identification

Some times little or no regard to issues or candidates Single-most significant & lasting indicator of voter behavior Straight-ticket voting Split-ticket voting his been on the rise since the ‘60s Today there are large number of people who call themselves

“independents” 1/3 to ¼ of all voters Important in close elections Typical independent today=young, above average education,

above average income

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Voting Behavior

Psychological Factors:Candidates & Issues

Personality, character, appearance, style past record, ability Important issues recent elections: recession, Iraq &

Afghanistan Wars, immigration, health care