Monday, January 30, 2012

AP US Gov Public Opinion Notes

1/30/12      
How are candidates chosen for the presidential election?
I.               What is the difference between a primary and a caucus?
A.             States decide whether they have a primary or a caucus
B.             Primary
1.             You walk into a voting booth and vote for a nominee for a political party to run in an election
2.             It’s like any other election
3.             First introduced in the early 1910-20s progressive era (people wanted more democracy and more influence over government- we got to vote for senators directly during this period), but took hold in the 1960s
4.             Three types of primaries- up to the individual states to decide
a)             Open primary- anyone can vote in the primary.  You don’t need to be a member of that party to vote
b)             Closed primary- you have to be a member of the political party to vote in the primary
c)             Blanket primary- like voting in a general election.  You can switch back and forth in parties for different offices like in a general election (no states use this anymore)
5.             Secret Ballot
C.            Caucus
1.             Instead of going to a booth to vote, people gather in a room and debate the nominees and then write down who they vote for
2.             Takes a few hours, so they are more influenced by activists who are heavily involved in the political process, especially caucuses because they require a commitment
3.             Publicly voting
D.            Front-loading- when states try move up their primary date to have more influence
1.             If a state tries to make its primary too early/before Iowa and New Hampshire, the national party might punish the state and not allow its delegates to vote at the national convention
2.             This year, Florida moved up its primary so as a punishment only half their delegates can go and vote at the convention (this also happened in 2008)
II.              How were presidential candidates picked before the primary system?
A.             Party caucuses in Congress picked presidential candidates (occurred up until the 1820s)
B.             1820s- set up National Nominating Conventions, where each party would meet and choose the candidate for their party to run in the election
1.             For the first 100 years it was the party elites who would be at the conventions and choose the nominees (average people did not have a say)
a)             Convention was exciting because you did not know who would get the nomination
2.             In the 1920s primaries and caucuses were adopted and gave people a say in choosing nominees.  It became widely accepted in the 1960s.  The party bosses did not have all the power, the people had a voice too
1/31/12
III.            The National Convention
A.             Occurs 2 months before the general election in October
B.             Before we had primaries, the conventions were very important because the nominees were picked at the conventions.  Now that we have primaries and caucuses, we usually know who the nominee is going to be
C.            What is the purpose of the convention today if it is not about picking the candidates?
1.             Sometimes they announce and formerly introduce the vice presidential nominee
2.             Motivate the party to get support for the election
3.             Officially introduce the nominee
4.             Write the party platform- the party’s goals and beliefs
D.            Brokered Convention- if no candidate gets a majority of delegates
1.             Each delegate is sent to the convention pledged to vote for a certain candidate who they are loyal to.  Each candidate gets a certain amount of delegates based on how many votes they got in the primary/caucus for each state (if a state has proportional primary/caucus a candidate gets delegates based on the percent of votes he got in a primary/caucus.  If a state has winner takes all primary/caucus the candidate who wins gets all the delegates for that state to the convention)
2.             Going into the convention you don’t know who the nominee is
3.             The Delegates go and cast their first vote to the candidate they pledged loyalty, and then after the first vote if no candidate gets a majority the delegates can vote for anyone they want
E.             The democratic party has superdelegates
1.             They are not pledged to vote for a certain candidate.  They can vote for whoever they want and can swing an election against the will of the primary/caucus voters
2.             Consist of Democratic members of Congress and democrats who served in office
3.             The democratic party created it to check the liberal wing of the democratic party.  The superdelegates make sure no one too liberal is nominated to run in the presidential election because they know someone who is too liberal could not win the national vote
2/1/12
IV.            Religion and US Politics
A.             Religion plays a major role in US politics and policy, unlike other democracies where religion is pushed to the side
B.             More people in the US consider themselves religious than people in other countries
1.             People in Europe would laugh that our political debates include disagreement over saying “under G-d” in the Pledge of Allegiance, and faith based programs (most religious people think it is ok for government money to go to churches/synagogues that have charity organizations).  In Europe, people don’t want their tax money going to religious organizations- there is a bitterness towards religious institutions
2.             We are unique for out culture war
a)             Other countries are all about class warfare.  In the US its all about culture wars
b)             Cultural issues over values are what distinguish us, not classes
2/3/12
C.            The Culture Wars
1.             Began in the 60s
a)             People began questioning American values (civil rights, feminism)
b)             People were moving away from religion and were not so conservative anymore.  More people were becoming progressive, questioning traditional values and refusing to conform
2.             Orthodox viewpoint
a)             Morality is consistent over time and does not change.  There are absolute truths that do not change
b)             Keep the same rules otherwise society will fall apart
c)             Traditional morality is more important that individual rights
d)             Religion holds society together by providing absolute values to live by
3.             Progressive viewpoint
a)             Believe that change is ok
b)             Individual rights need to be respected and are more important than traditional morals
4.             How real is the culture wars?
a)             Some feel the culture wars are played up by the political parties to get people to vote
2/6/12
Factors that affect public opinion
V.             Different regions of the country
A.             The Northeast tends to be more liberal- even Republicans in the NE tend to be moderate of liberal on social issues
B.             Upper Midwest (Industrial/rust belt) is a liberal area on economic issues (because of all the factories and union members), but can be conservative on social issues (because they are Catholic)
C.            South (bible belt) is heavily Republican/conservative because the Protestants live there.  The trend of the South becoming Republican took hold in the 1960s when LBJ, a democrat from the south, signed the Civil Rights Act
D.            Rocky mountain states tend to be very conservative
E.             West Coast tends to be liberal
VI.            Religion
A.             *The most important form of political socialization is the family- we get our political views through religion in our family
B.             The more religious you are in a group, the more conservative you tend to be
C.            Jews tend to be liberal on economic and social issues
1.             Social status- when Jews came to this country they weren’t treated well, and were helped by the Democrats, so they felt a sense of loyalty to the Democrats
2.             This doesn’t apply as much today because most Jews aren’t poor
3.             Jews feels a responsibility to the community as a whole, so they follow the Democratic party that provides for people
4.             History of Jews and what they went through makes them wary about the government having the power to tell people how to live
D.            Catholics
1.             Liberal on economic issues
a)             Were persecuted when they came to this country, so government help built loyalty to the Democrats
b)             Very into charity (they need it to get into heaven) and believe the government has a role in that
2.             Conservative on social issues
3.             So who do they vote for? 
a)             In the 70s and 80s the trend was for Catholics to move to the Republican party because the Democratic party was becoming too liberal (“Reagan Democrats”)
E.             Protestants
1.             Conservative on economic and social issues
2.             Don’t have the same social mission (to make the world a better place) as Jews and Catholics
a)             They were always the top people in the country
b)             Faith alone is the way to get to heaven, and no hierarchy of religious leaders.  It’s all about individual effort with G-d
VII.          Gender
A.             Gender Gap- men are moving to the Republican party
1.             Gun control, abortion, gay rights, and social programs- the Democratic party has become very liberal on these issues, which made many Democratic men become Republican
2.             Women like these programs, because they are more sensitive to these issues
VIII.         Schooling and race (read on your own)
Ideology
IX.            Political ideologies
A.             Libertarianism
1.             Believe in small government in all areas- social and economic issues
2.             Liberal on social issues and conservative on economic issues- no government intervention in both areas
3.             Government should only get involved when there is a clear violation of rights
4.             Would give a lot more power to the states
B.             Populists
1.             Opposite of Libertarians
2.             Want strong government intervention both socially and economically (social conservative, economic liberal)
3.             This term is also used to describe people who are looking out for the average American
C.            Liberalism
1.             Liberal on social and economic issues
2.             Want government intervention in the economic arena
a)             Believe in high taxes because the government needs money to fund programs for the poor people
b)             Intervention is needed to create a just society
3.             No government intervention on social issues
D.            Conservatism
1.             Conservative on social and economic issues
2.             Government should intervene in social issues but stay out of economic issues
2/8/12
X.             Why Americans Hate Politics- Libertarianism
A.             Today’s Libertarianism is what the conservative movement was before changes in the 1960s
1.             Goldwater was a conservative who ran for president, but really his conservatism was like today’s Libertarianism.  He was a father of modern Conservatism, but then the party moved more right on social issues, and he was not comfortable with that.  He thought that social issues and religion had no place in politics, and was therefore alienated from the Republican party
B.             Why Libertarians broke away from the Conservative movement in the 60s
1.             The Conservative movement was trying to impose values on people and telling people how to live
2.             Foreign policy- the conservatives were being too hawkish and provoking the USSR into a war.  They did not approve of the Vietnam War- we should not impose a certain type of government onto another country
C.            How did the movement become well known and popular?
1.             Reagan attacked government
a)             Reagan promised to reduce the size of government
b)             Reagan promised to cut the national debt, but it didn’t work out and he ended up spending money on defense and increased the national debt
D.            The government should only have the power to do things that we cannot (like raise an army).  Everything else should be done in the market and private organizations
2/9/12
XI.            Lanahan- Public Opinion
A.             Politicians manipulate public opinion
1.             They twist what the constituents want to make them want what they want
B.             Politicians don’t follow public opinion
1.             When Clinton was impeached, the Republicans pushed it through even though polls showed that the people didn’t want him impeached
C.            Crafted talk- manipulate language to influence people to vote a certain way
XII.           

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