Elections USA
Elections USA
E L E C T I O N
2016
#LAmericaDecide
Free and
fair elections
are the
cornerstone
of democracy.
b
U S A /// I N B R I E F
E lect i on Basics 4
P olit ical Parti es 1 6
P olit ical Convent i o n s 1 9
P r im ary + Caucus 2 0
ELECTIONS USA
Na t ional Convent i o n s 2 6
Con g ressional El e c ti o n s 2 8
E lect o ral Coll ege 3 0
Ca mp aigns 36
P o l i t i c a l Pol l s 4 0
Vot in g 42
Glossario 52
✪ Why do elections
matter?
• T H E BASI C S
Elections help ensure that power
passes in a peaceful, orderly
manner from citizens to their
elected representatives—and
from one elected official to his
or her successor.
The U.S. Constitution gives certain powers
to the national (or “federal”) government and
reserves others for the individual states, and the
people. In many countries, national governments
• CALIFORNIANS
WAIT TO VOTE set education and health policies, but in the U.S.,
AT A POLLING the 50 states have primary responsibility in these
PLACE IN areas. National defense and foreign policy are
LOS ANGELES' examples of federal responsibility.
VENICE BEACH The Constitution requires that each state
DISTRICT, have a republican form of government, and it
NOVEMBER 4, forbids states from violating certain specified rights
2008.
(e.g., “No State shall…deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law;
nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction
the equal protection of the laws.”). But states
otherwise retain considerable power.
The American system can appear
complicated, but it ensures that voters have
a voice at all levels of government.
5
✪ Who votes?
6
✪
• T H E BASI C S
Which public officials
are elected?
8
⍟
• T H E BASI C S
Requirements to hold
federal office
A federal
office holder
must meet
certain
requirements
35
Natural-born*
PRESIDENT U.S. citizen; reside
in the U.S. for 14 years
yrs before the election
30
U.S. citizen for
SENATOR 9 years; reside
in the state from
yrs which elected
25
U.S. citizen for
REPRESENTATIVE 7 years; reside
in the state from
yrs which elected
✪ When are elections held?
10
✪
• T H E BASI C S
How many times
can a person
be president?
12
• T H E BASI C S
Each of the 50 states is entitled to
one seat in the House, with additional seats
allocated according to population.
Alaska, for example, has a very small popula-
tion and therefore has only one U.S. representative.
California, the most populous state, has 55. Every
10 years the U.S. Census is taken, and House seats
are reallocated among the states based on the
new population figures.
Each state draws the boundaries of its congres-
sional districts. States have considerable latitude in
how they do this, so long as the number of citizens
in each district is as close to equal as possible.
Unsurprisingly, when one party controls the state
government, it tries to draw the boundaries to the
benefit of its own congressional candidates.
The Senate was designed for its members to
represent larger constituencies—an entire state—
and to provide equal representation for each state,
regardless of population.
Thus, small states possess as much influence
(two senators) as large states in the Senate.
Elections for
federal offices
are usually held
in even-numbered
years.
Presidents and
vice presidents 2012 2014 2016
are elected every
4 years. In the
U.S. Congress,
senators are
elected every
6 years and
representatives
are elected 435 435
every 2 years.
PRESIDENT
VICE PRESIDENT
U.S. CONGRESS
REPRESENTATIVE
SENATOR
• T H E BASI C S
U.S. President
U.S. Vice President
Elected every
4 years
U.S. House of
Representatives
All 435 representatives
elected every
435 2 years
U.S. Senate
33 out of 100 senators
33/100 elected every
33/100 2 years
34/100
15
✪ Why does the
United States have
only two major
political parties?
16
• P OL I T I C AL PART I ES
Rarely do any of the 50 states elect a governor
• EVERY who is not a Democrat or a Republican. And the number
PRESIDENT
of independent or third-party members of Congress or
SINCE 1852
of state legislatures is extremely low.
HAS BEEN
EITHER A Why aren’t there more small parties? Many
REPUBLICAN political experts point to America’s “first past the post”
OR A elections, in which the candidate with the most votes wins,
DEMOCRAT. even if they receive less than a majority of the votes cast.
In countries that instead award legislative seats based on
the proportion of votes a given party receives, there is
more incentive for small parties to form and compete.
In the U.S. system, a party can win a seat only if its
candidate gets the most votes. That makes it difficult
for small political parties to win elections.
✪ What about Americans
who don’t belong to
• P OL I T I C AL PART I ES
the Democratic or
Republican Party?
In recent decades, increasing numbers of
American voters call themselves politically
“independent,” or affiliated with no party.
Yet opinion polls suggest that most independents lean
toward either the Republican or Democratic Party. Some do
belong to smaller political parties. Regardless of party
affiliation—or lack thereof—all Americans age 18 and older are
allowed to vote in local, state and presidential elections.
How does the two-party system represent the beliefs
of Americans who affiliate with neither party?
Sometimes Americans feel that neither major party advances
their preferred policies and beliefs. One strategy they may
pursue is to form a new party for the purpose of
demonstrating the popularity of their ideas. One famous
example occurred in 1892, when dissatisfied Americans
formed the Populist Party. Its platform called for a graduated
income tax, direct election of senators, and an eight-hour
workday. The Populists never captured the presidency, but the
big parties noticed their new competitor’s growing popularity.
The Democrats and Republicans began to adopt many
of the Populists’ ideas, and in time the ideas
became the law of the land.
18
✪ How are presidential
candidates chosen?
• P OL I T I C AL CONV EN T I O N S
During the summer of a presidential
election year, the Republicans and
Democrats each hold a national
convention where they adopt a “platform” of policies
and nominate their party’s candidates for president and
vice president. Today, a simple majority of delegates’ votes
is needed to capture the nomination.
In earlier times, the conventions were exciting, with
outcomes uncertain and candidates rising and falling with
each ballot. Sometimes negotiations were held in “smoke-
filled” hotel rooms, where cigarette- and cigar-smoking
party leaders cut deals to secure their preferred candidate
the required delegate votes.
Today the process is more transparent, and
• DEMOCRATS
WAVE SIGNS
for about the last 60 years, each party’s presidential
FOR THEIR nominee was known before its convention began.
PRESIDENTIAL Each state (plus the District of Columbia and several
NOMINEE, U.S. territories) is allotted a number of delegates—typi-
BARACK OBAMA, cally determined by the state’s population but adjusted by
DURING THE a formula that awards bonuses for factors like whether a
2008 DEMOCRATIC state voted for the party’s candidate in the last presiden-
NATIONAL tial election. Most delegates are “pledged” to support a
CONVENTION. particular andidate, at least on the first ballot, and no
convention has required more than one ballot to nominate
its presidential candidate for many years.
✪ What’s the difference
between a primary
and a caucus?
• P RI MARY + C AUC US
Primary elections and caucuses
differ in how they are organized
and who participates. And rates
of participation differ widely.
Primaries: State governments fund and conduct
primary elections much as they would any election:
Voters go to a polling place, vote and leave. Voting
• DURING THE
NEW HAMPSHIRE
is anonymous and quickly accomplished. Some states
PRIMARY, hold “closed” primaries in which only declared party
REPUBLICAN members can participate. For example, only registered
PRESIDENTIAL Democrats can vote in a closed Democratic primary.
CANDIDATE In an open primary, all voters can participate, regard-
MITT ROMNEY less of their party affiliation or lack of affiliation.
VISITS BEDFORD
Caucuses: State political parties organize
HIGH SCHOOL,
caucuses, in which faithful party members speak
JANUARY 8,
2008.
openly on behalf of the candidates they support for the
party nomination. They are communal events in which
participants vote publicly. Caucuses tend to favor candi-
dates who have dedicated and organized supporters who
can use the caucus to elect convention delegates pledged
to their favored presidential candidate. Caucus participants
also identify and prioritize issues they want to include
in the state or national party platform. Participation in
a caucus requires a high level of political engagement
and time. Consequently, caucuses tend to attract
fewer participants than primaries.
21
✪ How many states
hold a primary
or caucus and when
are they held?
22
• P RI MARY + C AUC US
For many years, Iowa has held the first
caucuses, generally in January or early February
of the presidential election year, and New
Hampshire the first primary, a short time later.
Because these and other early contests frequently
establish which candidates lack enough support to
contend seriously for the presidency, candidates expend
great effort in these early states, addressing their needs
and interests and organizing campaigns within even
smaller states, spending money on staff, media and
hotels. As a result, more and more states schedule their
primaries and caucuses in the winter months. Many
• TODAY ALL states hold their events on the same day.
50 STATES The major parties frequently tweak the rules
AND THE in ways they hope will produce the strongest possible
DISTRICT OF candidate. For example, in 2016, the Republicans will
COLUMBIA allow states that hold their primaries after March 15
HAVE EITHER to award their delegates “winner-take-all,” so that
PRESIDENTIAL
the candidate who earns the most votes—even if it’s
PRIMARIES
only, say, 25 percent of the votes in an eight-candidate
OR CAUCUSES.
field—will capture all that state’s delegates.
A major outcome of the proliferation and acceler-
ation of primaries and caucuses is that the nominees of
the major parties are known before the national party
conventions are held in late summer. This has diminished
the importance of the national nominating conventions,
which have become largely ceremonial events.
Washington
North Minne
Montana Dakota
Oregon
Idaho
South Dakota
Wyoming
Nebraska
Nevada
Utah
Colorado
California Kansas
Arizona Oklahoma
New Mexico
Texas
ska
Ala
Hawaii
Alaska
✪
• P RI MARY + C AUC US
State by state
primaries + Maine
n ia
Virgi In caucuses, only
registered party
ky
Missouri Kentuc North
members can vote,
but anyone can join
Carolina
e e the party at the
Tenness caucus. In closed
South
Carolina primaries, only
Arkansas registered party
members can vote,
M
an open primary.
ip
pi
✏
Louisiana PRIMARY, CAUCUS or BOTH
Flo
CAUCUS =
r
ida
PRIMARY =
BOTH =
25
✪ Why do political
parties still hold
national nominating
conventions?
27
✪ How many votes
does it take to win
a U.S. congressional
election?
28
• CONG RESSI ONAL EL EC T I O N S
✪ Does the presidential
candidate with
the most votes
always win?
E L E C T I O N
2016
#LAmericaDecide
30
• EL EC TORAL COL L EG E
Americans later amended the Constitution
to make the system more democratic. Beginning
16ecide
E
C
T
I
O
N
#L
A people. And while the Electoral College still officially
elects the president, the people choose the Electoral
College members.
Here’s how it works.
After the nationwide presidential election is held
in November, the Electoral College meets in December.
In most states, electors cast their votes based on how
the majority of voters in their state voted. The electors
vote in their states on December 15, and Congress
officially counts the results in January.
Each state has a number of electors equal to the
number of its members in the U.S. House of Represen-
tatives—determined by a census of the the state’s pop-
ulation, plus its two senators. The District of Columbia,
which is not a state and has no voting representation
in Congress, has three Electoral College votes.
There are 538 electors in the Electoral
College; 270 electoral votes are needed to
win the presidential election.
Most states award electoral votes on a
winner-take-all basis. The presidential ticket that
gets the most citizens’ votes receives all that state’s
electoral votes.
Two states—Nebraska and Maine—have experimented
with awarding their electoral votes proportionately
based on citizens’ votes. Presidential election strategy
consists of “carrying” a combination of states that
adds up to 270 electoral votes. Election results can
turn on the electoral votes in a handful of competitive
state races. • THE
One consequence of the winner-take-all system PRESIDENTIAL
is that a candidate can win the most votes nationally TICKET THAT
but lose the election. GETS THE
Imagine that a candidate wins a state by a small MOST CITIZENS’
margin and that state has a lot of electoral votes. That VOTES IN
candidate would still receive all of the electoral votes. A STATE
So if a candidate wins in California by a small margin, RECEIVES
ALL THAT
they get all 55 of California’s electoral votes. That same
STATE’S
candidate may lose in other, smaller states by large
ELECTORAL
margins and receive fewer popular votes than his
VOTES.
or her opponent. But that candidate would still have
the edge in the Electoral College.
It is important for candidates to campaign in all states,
even ones with smaller populations and fewer electoral
votes, in order to get a total of 270 electoral votes.
32
✪
• EL EC TORAL COL L EG E
Why do Americans
keep the Electoral
College?
3 3
7
4 3
3
5
6
6
55 9
6
11 7
5
38
3
4
3
✪
• EL EC TORAL COL L EG E
2016 Electoral
College votes 4
state by state 3
10 4
11
29
10 7 4
16
20 14
6
18 10 3
3
20 11
5 13 Electoral votes
10 8 are allocated
according to
15 each state's
11 population,
based on the
9 national census
6 taken every
10 years.
9 16
6 ✏
2016 v 1960
8
↑INCREASE =
29 ↓DECREASE =
SAME =
35
✪ How do presidential
candidates
pay for their
campaigns?
36
• C AMPAI G NS
For candidates who raise their own funds, federal
law dictates how and from whom candidates
for president, senator and representative may seek
contributions. It also limits how much any individual
contributor can give. The law ensures that the press and
citizens know who is contributing to a given candidate.
A candidate for president must establish a campaign
organization, called a political committee, and register
it with the Federal Election Commission. Once registered,
political committees may seek contributions but must
report all funds raised to the commission, which makes
the information available to the public. Recent major-party
presidential candidates have spent hundreds of millions
of dollars on their campaigns. Those who raise their own
funds must find thousands of contributors.
✪ Why do U.S. presidential
campaigns cost so much?
The short answer is that it is expensive
to communicate to a nation of 100
million voters for the 12 or more
months that make up the presidential campaign
season. U.S. presidential candidates must campaign at
the national level as well as in the 50 states. This means
that they must hire both national and state-level staff and
reach voters in person and through national and local
television, radio and social media. The proliferation of
presidential primaries and caucuses has resulted in
longer campaigns that involve more travel and paid
dvertising than in the past.
• POLITICAL To campaign for office, a candidate needs to hire
CANDIDATES staff; arrange for office space and travel; conduct
MUST RAISE research; issue position papers; advertise on radio and
MONEY television, in publications and on the Internet; and
TO TRAVEL conduct numerous public appearances and fundraising
TO WHERE
events.
VOTERS
Candidates for president have the daunting task
LIVE.
of organizing their primary campaigns state by state
and then, if nominated, their general election campaign
throughout the nation. A candidate for the House of
epresentatives will campaign in his or her specific
congressional district, while a Senate candidate must
cover an entire state.
✪
• C AMPAI G NS
Do candidates have access
to other sources of funding?
In 2010, the Supreme Court ruled that
political spending is a form of speech
and thus protected by the First Amend-
ment to the U.S. Constitution. As a result,
since 2010, candidates can spend an unlimited amount
of their own money to fund their campaigns.
The ruling also gave greater leeway to “political
action committees” (PACs), which are formed when
individuals, businesses and interest groups pool their
money and donate it to support specific ideas, can-
didates, ballot initiatives or legislation. According
to federal law, an organization becomes a PAC when
it receives or spends more than $2,600 for the
• POLITICAL
SIGNS OF purpose of influencing a federal election. States have
CANDIDATES their own laws governing when an organization
FOR VARIOUS becomes a PAC.
OFFICES LINE Because they are independent of a candidate’s
A NEIGHBOR- official fundraising committee, PACs are not subject to
HOOD STREET the same regulations—even though they must register
IN HOUSTON, with the Federal Election Commission—but they are
TEXAS. limited in how closely they can coordinate with candi-
dates. For example, a PAC cannot contribute more than
$5,000 directly to a candidate’s election committee, but
it can spend an unlimited amount of money to run ads
that advocate or oppose a specific candidate’s views.
39
✪ How important are polls?
• P OL LS
Though not part of the rules and laws
governing elections, public opinion
polls have become an important part
of the electoral process. Many political
candidates hire pollsters and take frequent polls. Polling
informs political candidates of how well they are being
perceived in relation to their competitors and what issues
are uppermost in the minds of the voters. Newspapers,
television and other media also conduct opinion polls
and report the results (along with the results of private
polls) to give citizens a sense of how their preferences
• USING POLL DATA, for candidates, issues and policies stand in relation
THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE
AND OTHER NEWS- to the preferences of others.
PAPERS PRINTED Fifty years ago, only one or two large organizations
EARLY EDITIONS
dominated public opinion polling. Today, in an era
ANNOUNCING THAT
of instant news, the Internet and 24-hour cable-news
REPUBLICAN THOMAS
DEWEY HAD DEFEATED channels, there are more polls, and more reporting and
THE INCUMBENT analysis of poll results. While some polls represent state-
PRESIDENT, HARRY of-the-art practices, others are hastily conducted and
TRUMAN, IN 1948. employ too-small sample sizes—and may have more value
WHEN TRUMAN WON
as entertainment than social science. Recent years have
WITH 303 ELECTORAL
VOTES, HE HELD THE
witnessed greater skepticism about the accuracy—and
ERRONEOUS HEADLINE objectivity—of many polls, and at least two major polling
ALOFT AND TOLD companies have stopped “horse race”–type polling around
REPORTERS, "THAT presidential elections. Still, it is unlikely that candidates,
AIN'T THE WAY
the media or the general public will abandon polling or
I HEARD IT!"
citing favorable poll results in the foreseeable future.
41
✪ Who conducts
U.S. elections?
E L E C T I O N
2016
#LAmericaDecide
42
• VOT I NG
Most U.S. election results are not particularly
close, but occasionally there are races with a very small
margin of victory or races in which the outcome is
contested and votes are recounted. This happened
in parts of Florida during the 2000 U.S. presidential
election—the closest in U.S. history. That race forced many
Americans to consider the myriad administrative tasks
surrounding their elections for the first time.
The U.S. Constitution gives citizens age 18 and
above the right to vote. There is no national list of eligible
voters, so localities create them, by requiring citizens to
register as voters. This is to prevent fraud. In the past,
selective registration procedures were used to discourage
some citizens—most notably, African Americans in the
South—from voting. Today, the Voting Rights Act prohibits
these discriminatory practices.
Each state establishes its own registration require-
ments. Citizens who move are required to re-register
at their new place of residence. At times, states have
made registration easier and at other times they have
tightened the requirements. In 1993, the National Voter
Registration Act made it possible for citizens to register
to vote when they renew their state-issued driver’s
license. Some states allow voters to register on Election
Day. Recently, however, some states have passed laws
that require government-issued identification or eliminate
registration on Election Day.
Election administrators must ensure that
every eligible voter who wants to vote is on the
registration list. They also must exclude from the
list those who are unqualified (typically because they
are too young or do not live in the jurisdiction). Generally,
local election officials keep people on the lists even if
they have not voted recently, rather than excluding • IT TAKES
potentially eligible voters. When someone not on the THOUSANDS
registration list appears at the polls, officials typically OF LOCAL
issue them a provisional ballot to record their votes. VOLUNTEERS
Only after that person’s eligibilityis reviewed (this usually AND OFFICIALS
happens after Election Day) is the vote counted. TO RUN U.S.
Election administrators also have to design ELECTIONS.
the ballots for each election. They must ensure
that all certified candidates are listed and all issues
up for decision are correctly worded. And they
must try to make the ballot as simple and as
clear as possible.
There are no national standards for ballot forms,
but federal law does require that administrators provide
ballots in multiple languages when a percentage of
the population in their jurisdiction does not speak
English as a primary language.
Where voting machines have replaced paper
ballots, local administrators are responsible for selecting
and maintaining them. And local officials also must
recruit and train a large temporary staff to work 10 to
15 hours on Election Day.
44
• VOT I NG
✪ How do Americans vote?
• VOT I NG
Since local authorities rather than
a single national authority conduct
elections, different localities—even
in the same state—can have different
types of ballots and voting technology.
Today, very few U.S. voters mark paper ballots by
putting an “X” next to a candidate’s name. That's because
many localities use optical systems that mechanically
scan paper ballots on which voters fill in circles or connect
lines. Still others employ a wide variety of mechanized
• A UNITED voting devices.
STATES FLAG
SERVES AS
In recent years, several states have adopted proce-
A BACKDROP dures that make ballots available to voters before the
AS PEOPLE election. This trend started with provisions for absentee
VOTE AT LINDELL ballots, issued to voters who anticipate being away from
SCHOOL IN their home (and their voting place) on Election Day. Some
LONG BEACH, states and local jurisdictions gradually liberalized this
NEW YORK, provision, allowing citizens to register as “permanent
NOVEMBER 6, absentee voters” and routinely have a ballot mailed to
2012. their home. Two states—Oregon and Washington—conduct
their elections entirely by mail. Absentee voters generally
return their completed ballots by mail.
Some states now allow citizens to vote up to three
weeks before Election Day using voting machines in
shopping malls and other public places. Citizens stop
by at their convenience to cast their votes.
47
✪ Does early voting affect
election results?
48
• VOT I NG
✪ What is the United States
doing to keep elections
fair in the future?
• VOT I NG
One of the important lessons of
the extremely close 2000 presidential
election was that the election
administration, balloting and vote-counting
challenges encountered in Florida could have occurred
almost anywhere in the United States. Several studies
were commissioned, and a variety of panels heard
• PEOPLE IN expert witnesses and took testimony about the need
UNIVERSITY
PARK,
for reform.
MARYLAND, In 2002, Congress passed the Help America
WAITED Vote Act to address the problems of the 2000 election
HOURS and anticipate new ones. First, the federal govern-
TO VOTE ment funded state and local efforts to replace outdated
IN THE 2008 punch-card and lever voting machines. Second, it
ELECTION. established the Election Assistance Commission to afford
local election technical assistance and to help local
officials establish voting device standards. The commis-
sion studies voting machine and ballot design, regis-
tration and provisional voting methods, techniques for
deterring fraud, procedures for recruiting and training
poll workers, and voter education programs.
The Help America Vote Act marks a significant
expansion of the federal government’s role in a
matter traditionally left to localities. But the reforms
introduced have helped restore faith in the U.S.
election process.
51
✪ Glossario delle Elezioni
Caucus
Una riunione, in particolar modo una riunione di persone il cui obiettivo sia politico od
organizzativo. Nell’esperienza della politica presidenziale americana, il termine ha
assunto il significato di riunione degli aderenti ad un partito durante il processo di
nomina dei candidati. Nel sistema consolidato dei caucus, gli aderenti ad un partito
impegnati distrettualmente selezionano i delegati per le riunioni di contea, che a loro
volta nominano quelli dello Stato. Le convention nell’ambito di uno Stato selezionano
poi i delegati che parteciperanno alla convention nazionale del partito. Lo scopo dei
caucus è quindi quello di indicare, attraverso la scelta dei delegati, quale sia il
candidato presidenziale preferito dalla base elettorale del partito in ogni singolo Stato.
L’effetto è quello di rendere democratica la selezione del candidato alle elezioni
presidenziali, essendo la scelta di questo determinata inizialmente a livello distrettuale.
Coattails
Si tratta di un’allusione alla coda del cappotto. Nell’esperienza politica americana si
riferisce all’abilità di un pubblico funzionario o di un candidato, in base alla forza della
propria popolarità, di incrementare le possibilità di vittoria di altri candidati apparte-
nenti allo stesso partito. Si suole quindi dire che questo candidato porta alla vittoria gli
altri “sulla coda del suo cappotto”.
Conservative
Ogni ambito dell’opinione politica compresa tra il centro e la destra. Dei due maggiori
partiti degli Stati Uniti, il Partito Repubblicano è generalmente considerato quello più
conservatore. I politici conservatori negli Stati Uniti sono solitamente favorevoli ai
principi del libero mercato e della riduzione fiscale, e diffidano delle politiche federali
in quanto antagoniste a quelle del singolo Stato o locali.
Convention bounce
Un incremento della popolarità di un candidato, dimostrata dai sondaggi pubblici, nei
giorni immediatamente successivi alla sua nomina quale candidato per la convention
del partito Repubblicano o Democratico.
Debate
Una discussione che interessa due o più ambiti di uno specifico argomento. Nella
52
recente esperienza della politica americana, i dibattiti sono stati
progressivamente associati alle apparizioni televisive di ogni
candidato alle elezioni presidenziali o vice-presidenziali, illustrando
la propria opinione o quella del proprio partito e rispondendo alle
domande poste dai giornalisti o dal pubblico. I dibattiti possono
tenersi anche radiofonicamente o nell’ambito di incontri con la
comunità, e possono essere organizzati in occasione di ogni tipo di
elezione.
Divided government
Un termine che solitamente si riferisce ad un contesto dove il
Presidente è membro di un partito, ed almeno un ramo del
Congresso (il Senato o la Camera dei Rappresentanti) è controllato
dal partito opposto. Questa condizione può presentarsi anche a
livello statale, quando la carica di Governatore è controllata da un
partito, e la legislatura dello Stato è invece controllata dal partito
opposto. Il “divided government” è un fatto ricorrente
nell’esperienza politica americana. Storicamente il suo impatto è
stato quello di scoraggiare cambiamenti radicali e motivare i
politici di entrambi i partiti al compromesso nell’approvazione delle
leggi.
Electoral college
Quando i cittadini americani si recano alle urne per votare il
Presidente, molti ritengono che essi stiano partecipando ad una
elezione diretta del Presidente. Tecnicamente non è così, per via
dell’esistenza del collegio elettorale, un retaggio del XVIII secolo. Il
collegio elettorale è il nome dato ad un gruppo di “elettori”
nominati dai membri di ciascun partito a livello in ogni Stato. Il
giorno delle elezioni sono questi “elettori”, legati all’uno o all’altro
candidato alla presidenza, ad essere scelti dai cittadini. Nel mese
di dicembre successivo alle elezioni presidenziali gli “elettori” si
riuniscono nelle capitali dei rispettivi Stati per votare il Presidente
ed il Vice Presidente. Per essere eletto, il Presidente deve ottenere
270 voti da parte degli “elettori”.
Front-loading
Si riferisce alla pratica di organizzare i caucus di partito negli Stati e le
elezioni primarie in sempre maggiore anticipo rispetto alle elezioni
generali. Anticipando le elezioni primarie, gli Stati cercano così di favorire
uno o due candidati presidenziali per avere una maggiore influenza in ogni
nomination di partito.
Front-runner
È il candidato favorito e considerato vincente in ogni elezione o processo
per la nomina.
Gender gap
Nelle elezioni più recenti le donne americane hanno generalmente votato
secondo schemi differenti da quelli maschili, spesso preferendo i candidati
Democratici a quelli Repubblicani, o i candidati più liberali. La stampa ha
soprannominato questo fenomeno come “gender gap”.
Horse race
Metafora utilizzata per la campagna elettorale, il termine “horse race”
richiama l’emozione del pubblico nelle competizioni sportive. Il termine si
riferisce anche alla copertura mediatica delle campagne, dove spesso si
enfatizza la posizione dei candidati attraverso la lettura dei sondaggi di
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opinione – paragonandoli a purosangue in competizione – piuttosto che
l’opinione dei candidati su specifici temi.
Liberal
Nell’ampio spettro della politica americana, il termine “liberale” si
riferisce alla componente compresa tra il centro e la sinistra. Dei due
principali partiti, i Democratici sono ritenuti quelli più liberali
nell’accezione corrente del termine. I politici liberali tendono a favorire
un maggiore potere federale quale rimedio alle presunte ineguaglianze
sociali; in ambito culturale, i liberali sostengono il femminismo, i diritti
delle minoranze ed enfatizzano la libertà di condotta individuale.
Midterm election
Sono le elezioni per il Senato e la Camera dei Rappresentanti che si
tengono ogni due anni durante il termine quadriennale del mandato
presidenziale. I risultati vengono a volte interpretati come un referen-
dum popolare in merito alla politica del Presidente nei primi due anni
del suo mandato. Le elezioni di “medio-termine” determinano alcuni
membri del Senato e tutti i membri della Camera dei Rappresentanti,
così come molte cariche locali o statali.
Negative ads
Pubblicità tesa a persuadere gli elettori a votare per un candidato
facendo apparire l’altro negativamente, attraverso un attacco alla
persona o ai risultati dell’avversario.
C T I O N
016 Platform
Nell’ambito delle politiche presidenziali, questo termine si riferisce ad
un impegno formale sottoscritto da un partito e relativo ai suoi principi
ricaDecide ed obiettivi, redatto durante il processo di nomina presidenziale. Nel
corso degli ultimi anni, le piattaforme dei partiti sono divenute meno
importanti in conseguenza del fatto che la televisione ha dato maggiore
risalto alla personalità del candidato ed alla percezione delle sue abilità
di leader.
Presidential tickets
Il binomio dei candidati alla Presidenza e alla Vice Presidenza.
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Primary election
Le elezioni primarie sono un contesto elettorale finalizzato a
selezionare un candidato di un partito per un particolare ruolo
pubblico. Le primarie possono tenersi ad ogni livello governativo,
inclusi le competizioni locali per l’elezione del sindaco, le elezioni
distrettuali per la Camera dei Rappresentanti, le elezioni statali del
Governatore o dei senatori, e per la nomina del Presidente degli
Stati Uniti.
Nelle primarie “chiuse”, solo i votanti registrati ad un partito sono
ammessi al voto. Nelle primarie “aperte” gli elettori di un partito
(definiti elettori “cross-over”) possono votare alle primarie di un
altro partito. Le primarie per il candidato presidenziale si tengono a
livello statale per evidenziare le preferenze di un singolo Stato
nell’esprimere un candidato. A seconda delle leggi vigenti nei
singoli Stati, gli elettori possono votare direttamente per il
candidato presidenziale o per i delegati impegnati al voto per un
candidato specifico in occasione delle convention. Le elezioni
primarie negli Stati, se tenute con largo anticipo, possono
occasionalmente influire nel percorso di un candidato presidenziale
e determinare la crescita di un candidato meno noto. Le primarie
costituiscono un’alternativa al sistema dei caucus.
Redistricting
Si riferisce al processo di rideterminazione dei confini geografici
di un distretto congressuale, il distretto elettorale all’interno dello
Stato da cui sono eletti i membri della Camera dei Rappresentanti.
Sia i Democratici che i Repubblicani competono a livello statale per
ottenere il potere di determinare i meccanismi di re-distrettualizza-
zione – solitamente controllando il potere legislativo statale. Così
facendo possono ridisegnare i confini dei distretti congressuali in
modo che questi offrano un margine di vantaggio al proprio
partito.
Regionalization
I cinquanta Stati dell’Unione sono non ufficialmente raggruppati
approssimativamente in sei regioni, i cui Stati condividono taluni
tratti culturali e geografici. In epoca di elezioni primarie, la
“regionalizzazione” si riferisce alla pratica di raggruppamento degli
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Stati nell’ambito di una regione per massimizzare l’effetto della regione nel processo
elettorale. Questo accade anche organizzando le primarie nello stesso giorno negli Stati di
una regione.
Single-member district
L’attuale assetto per eleggere i legislatori nazionali e statali negli Stati Uniti, dove un
candidato è eletto in ogni distretto legislativo; il vincitore è il candidato che ottiene la
maggioranza dei voti. Il sistema a candidato singolo consente di vincere ad un solo partito in
ogni distretto. Questo è esattamente l’opposto del sistema proporzionale, dove più ampi
distretti sono coinvolti e dove numerosi membri sono eletti in base alla proporzione dei voti
ricevuti dal loro partito.
Sound bite
Un breve e facilmente citabile commento da parte di un candidato.
Spin doctor/spin
Consulente mediatico o politico assunto per una campagna elettorale per assicurare che il
candidato ottenga la migliore pubblicità possibile in ciascun contesto. Ad esempio, dopo un
dibattito tra i candidati alla presidenza, ogni “spin doctor” dei candidati incontra i giornalisti
in modo che questi citino le affermazioni più importanti ed efficaci formulate dal candidato
durante il dibattito, convincendo la stampa, e di riflesso il pubblico, che il loro candidato sia
stato il “vincitore” del dibattito. Quando questi consulenti mediatici svolgono il loro lavoro, di
loro si dice che sono intenti nell’attività di “spinning” (letteralmente “filare” o “far ruotare”) su
una situazione o un evento.
Superdelegates
Membri di alto livello di un partito che non sono associati a nessuno stato in particolare e
che quindi possono votare secondo le proprie preferenze personali.
Super Tuesday
A partire dalla campagna per le elezioni presidenziali del 1984, si usa definire
con il termine “supermartedì” quel giorno di febbraio o marzo, un martedì
appunto, in cui si concentra il maggior numero di consultazioni per le votazioni
primarie dei partiti repubblicano e democratico.
Il Super Tuesday assume un’importanza fondamentale nella definizione del
“ticket” di entrambi i partiti, in quanto dal risultato di queste elezioni contempo-
ranee scaturisce spesso il nome del più probabile candidato presidente per i due
partiti, e allo stesso tempo molti dei candidati più deboli lasciano la com-
petizione.
Ticket splitting
È riferito al voto per candidati di partiti differenti nell’ambito della stessa
tornata elettorale – come nel caso ad esempio di un voto dato al candidato
Democratico alla presidenza ed a quello Repubblicano come senatore. Dal
momento che i “ticket splitters” non votano per tutti i candidati di un partito, si
suole dire che questi effettuano lo “split” (letteralmente “separazione” o
“divisione”) del proprio voto.
Town meeting
Il termine si riferisce ad una riunione informale organizzata da un funzionario
pubblico o da un candidato con un gruppo di persone, spesso locali, dove
l’atmosfera è egualitaria ed informale, e dove i membri del pubblico possono
porre domande direttamente al funzionario o al candidato.
Tracking survey
Si tratta di un tipo di sondaggio dell’opinione pubblica che consente ai candidati
di seguire, o “tracciare”, le impressioni degli elettori nel corso della campagna
elettorale. Per i sondaggi iniziali, gli intervistatori si rivolgono allo stesso numero
di elettori nel corso di tre serate consecutive. La quarta sera, la struttura
incaricata del sondaggio intervista altri elettori, aggiunge le risposte al campione
ed elimina le risposte date nel corso della prima sera. Continuando in questo
modo, i modelli si susseguono ad un ritmo costante di risposte tratte dalle
interviste delle tre serate precedenti.
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Every vote counts.
E L E C T I O N
2016
#LAmericaDecide
ERI A
C