A level US Politics - 3C ((1) Election and Voting - Presidential elections) Mind Map on (13) How can we explain voter behaviour?, created by Marcus Danvers on 10/06/2014.
12/15 presidential elections the party that managed to
gain the highest level of support from its own
identifiers was the party that won the election
E.g. 2004 89% Dems voted Kerry, 93% Reps voted Bush.
25-30% of electorate are independent voters -
voters who do not identify with either party
Mustn't see independent
voters are simple group
Might be 5 reasons for independent voting:
25% disengaged - do not care with Party gets
into power. Seem happy with the status quo
24% disguised partisans - Tend to vote consistently with one
party. But are not registered as either Democrat nor Republican
as they may occasionally vote for an Independent candidate
18% Deliberators - classic swing voters
18% Disillusioned - very little faith
in government and 2 party system
16% Dislocated - tend to describe themselves as socially liberal
and fiscally conservative. Will tend to vote for candidates (Either
from 2 parties or independents) who represent these values
Gender
Women more likely to vote Democrat
than men Between 1964 to 2000
Gender Gap - Women and Men
vote in different ways
Reason for Gender Gap -
connected to policy differences.
In major policy areas
Abortion
Defence
Law and order
Gun control
Women's rights
Women support Dem policies
Race
Most significant group = African -
American and Hispanics
African - Americans (AA) most likely to vote Dem:
Dem President Johnson and Kennedy
persuaded Congress to pass civil rights laws
that protected civil rights in these areas:
Housing
Employment
Education
Voting
Between 1980-2008 A-A never gave less
than 83% support to Dem candidates
Even during Clinton's impeachment trial
A-A's were the most loyal supporters
Growing group = Hispanics
16% of total population and rising
Young group so full-potential yet to show - group to watch
and a group which politicians will be canvassing heavily
Not a unified group - from very
diverse areas ( e.g. Mexico vs Cuba)
Voted Bush in 2000 election why
Brother Jeb Bush married to Hispanic
G W Bush fluent in Spanish
Bush directly campaign to Hispanic group - socially
conservative policies e.g. Anti-Abortion etc
20% increase in Republican support was seen
Obama holds greatest Hispanic vote in 2012
election 71% vs 27% to Romney why?
Immigration reform
Republican rhetoric and platform based
on deportation of illegal immigrants
No campaigning of
Hispanics from Republicans
Hispanic voting patterns seem to go counter to Hispanic Demographic
e.g. lower income, Socially conservative, divided on abortion laws.
Religion = Protestant vs
Catholic voters
Protestant = Republican
Socially conservsative
Fiscally conservative
Catholic = Democratic
Socially responsibility
Fiscally responsibility
HOWEVER , Democrat stance on abortion is causing problems for Catholic base. Starting to
see decline in Catholic voters following 2004 elections ( Bush won 52% of Catholic votes)
Michael Barrone: "American
Two Nations of different faiths"
Tradition-minded morally liberal
Liberation-minded morally liberal
In 2008 election religion was not a major player - none
of the candidates was a "born-again evangelical"
However, in 2012 election religion played a key part. Romney
gained 78% of white evangelical Christian votes + 63% of those
who attended religious services more than once a week
Could be due to Tea Party movement and
the rise in social conservatives the
Republican party - think Rick Santorum etc.
Hispanic becoming more important in this debate as
increasing number of Protestants and declining Catholics
Age - Quite difficult to
identify long-term trends
Rising American Electorate (RAE) = Hispanics, single
parent families, unmarried women and people under 30
Going to become a key demographic
60% of those under 30 and 52% of those under 45
voted for Obama - making up 46% of all voters
2008 - 2012 sees less young voters and
less young voters voting Obama
Perhaps Obama went out of fashion - Yes we can
Wealth - Michael Barone - "man does not vote on
bread alone" - wealth only part of the bigger picture
Traditionally Wealthy have voted Democrat - ficsally liberal
Traditionally less well off voted Republican - fiscally conservative
However, Obama (2008) appealed to most economic groups
with emphasis on financial reform of banks (credit crunch)
Obama still popular in 2012 with richest segments of society
Region - shifting between two parties
Democrats traditionally South
Today - North Eastern states
Republicans traditionally North
Today - Southern states
Why
South becoming more socially conservative
Populations declining in North Eastern state
Population areas
High-density tend to vote
Democrat, sparsely populated
areas vote Republians
Suburbs are the battleground in elections
because the voters are not decided
Live in the city exposed
to a variy of views
Living in rural not exposed to
lots of divers people, less
sympatheticto liberal views
Policies
E.g. Economy - Clinton 92
E.g. Change - Obama 08
E.g. Foreign policy post 9/11 - GW Bush 04
E.g. immigration 2012
Swung to Dem over Hispanic
Dems Affirmative action, redistribution of
wealth, welfare fights, reform of criminal system
States
Centre likely to vote
Republican
West and north coast Democrat
50 : 50 election most
states are safe apart form
FL, CO, VA, NV
The south use to vote Dem but
with the Dem Kenny support
equal right they swung to Repub