We can work on Voting and Elections in America

There are many types of elections in the United States. Elections are the way in which citizens choose representatives that ideally best reflect their policy preferences. Elections might also help the public to hold some politicians accountable.[1] As you might guess, things can be a bit more complex than that.

As we discussed, governance in the United States is characterized by the system of federalism and separation of powers. This complex system of governance means that people end up voting for a great number of offices and voting procedures. Some argue that the great number of elections in the U.S. can contribute to low turnout rates (voter fatigue).

In direct democracies, people would directly vote on policy outcomes. This type of voting is not possible in larger communities. Instead, we have a representative government, in which people choose politicians to achieve desired policy objectives.

[1] Thmassen, Jacques. Elections and Democracy: Representation and Accountability. Oxford Scholarship Online, 2014.

The results of the 2016 presidential election renewed discussions about the Electoral College (EC). Trump won the EC vote, while Clinton won the popular vote. Many wonder how it can be that the president is not the winner of the popular vote. That’s because we have an indirect way of choosing the president. The winner is not be chosen by the popular vote (the total number of people voting for a candidate), but rather by the Electoral College. There are 538 Electoral College votes. As originally designed, the Electoral College was a way of indirectly electing the president, “each state was to select a number of electors equal to the number of congressmen plus the number of senators.”[1] States had their own rules on how to select these electors.[2] Things have changed a bit over time in terms of how the Electoral College operates. Today, most states give all Electoral College votes to the candidate that wins the most popular votes, (except in Maine and Nebraska[3]).

Watch this video to get a clearer understanding of the Electoral College.

[1] Maisel, L. Sandy. American Political Parties and Elections. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.

The image above depicts how turnout among the voting age population in the U.S. compares to turnout rates in other countries in 2012. Notice that only a bit more than half, 53.6%, of the voting age population in the U.S. participated, whereas in Belgium and Turkey the rate was closer to 90%. (You may access the interactive graph here). The U.S. is nearly at the bottom of the scale, with rates comparable to those of Japan, Chile, and Switzerland. We might ask, why is it the case that turnout in the U.S. is so low? Why is it so low in Switzerland? This is a topic of debate among political scientists. Some argue that this has something to do with electoral institutions. Both the U.S. and Switzerland have some of the most difficult processes for voting in place (Wattenberg, 2000). Others note that maybe voters are apathetic and lack interest in participating in elections.

One way to explore this turnout trend further is to focus on the trend in turnout in the U.S. over time.

Back in the nineteenth century, almost everyone eligible to vote went to the polls to cast a ballot. Turnout rates averaged about 80% nationwide, and up to 90% in some states. In the graph below, notice that from 1850 to about 1896, voting rates were consistently high.

Then in 1896 turnout dropped sharply by about 20 points, from about 80% to 60%, and this happened in less than 10 years! Notice that turnout then dropped again at around 1920. It increased afterwards. In the 1950s, we see rates rising again to the 60% level. But, then after the 1950s, voting rates drop again down to the 50% level—which is where we are today (though rates have increased a bit in recent elections, slightly over the 50% mark).

What we see here are three classic puzzles of low turnout in the political science literature. These include the post-1896 drop, the 1920 drop, and the post-1965 drop.

Each puzzle has a different explanation.

The post-1896 Turnout Drop

One thing that is striking is that after the 1896 drop, turnout rates never return to their previous levels. So, what happened? There are two competing hypothesis seeking to account for this drop. One argues that changes in electoral institutions influenced the low participation rates. The other, argues that a decline in party competition led to the turnout drop.

The declining competition thesis contends that by the late nineteenth century elections were not as close as they had been in the past. For example, a state that was previously a battleground state was no longer competitive. Imagine for example that in the 2016 race Florida had become a non-competitive state. Well, that is what happened back then in some states. Some previously competitive states became uncompetitive. This can lead to reduced turnout because in such circumstances parties lack incentives to mobilize voters.

The electoral institutional explanation argues that the turnout drop was not consequent to declining mobilization, but rather, that a number of electoral institutions meant to weaken the hold parties had over the electorate made it more difficult to vote and also eliminated a great deal of political corruption. Most states adopted the Australian Ballot, state-printed ballots that replaced the former party-printed ballots. This meant that parties were less able to engage in the corrupt practice of buying and selling votes.

During this time, we also saw the implementation of in-person voter registration systems. In the U.S. voter registration systems have been in place during most of the nation’s history. Massachusetts had the first system in 1800s and other states followed suit. But the earlier systems for the most part consisted of a board of registration making lists of known voters in their respective towns. Communities were smaller back then and most voters were known to the early election administration systems, which were in the stages of early development.

But, in the late 1800s, many states began calling for more stringent voter registration systems. Now, most states implemented in-person voter registration systems. This meant people had to go to vote at a specific location during the few days registration was open. Most states had from 1 to about 5 days of registration, and hours could at times be limited to regular business hours (but this varied greatly by state). The electoral institutions argument thus notes that because voting became much more difficult at this time, turnout dropped.

Another explanation synthesizes both of these views, arguing that the turnout dropped resulted from a combination of declining political competition and the implementation of electoral institutions that weakened parties and made voting more difficult.

The 1920 and post-1950s drop

The 1920s drop has a fairly simple explanation. With passage of the 19th Amendment, women gained the right to vote. This meant that the size of the electorate expanded. But, contrary to expectations, many women failed to participate in elections. Turnout dropped because the voting eligible population increased, but women did not vote.

The post-1950s puzzle is different than the other two. After the 1950s, we saw turnout in the decline. But, contrary to what happened in the late nineteenth century when voting regulations were becoming more stringent, now most states were easing voting requirements. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 eliminated many of the restrictions that made it difficult for racial and ethnic minorities to participate. Residency and registration were becoming more lax, and poll hours were extended. The puzzle then is, why did turnout drop when it was becoming easier for people to vote?

Theories of voting behavior attempt to explain why people vote and more generally what influences turnout. One school of thought, advanced by the authors of the classic in political science, The American Voter, is that voters in the U.S. were for the most part unsophisticated and uninformed, making voting decisions largely based on party ID. Party ID is one of the most stable attitudes, often influenced by the party ID of the voter’s parents.[1] Voters lacked a “coherent ideology.” This doesn’t mean ideology in the sense that we usually think of it (in terms of liberal or conservative ideology). Rather, it means that voters lacked real opinions on issues and were unable to form a consistent ideology (for example, they might support positions that are seemingly contradictory on an ideological scale). The view that voters are unsophisticated suggests concerns about voting and democratic governance in general, because it means that decisions about representation can be based on manipulation of voters by the media and politicians.[2]

V.O. Key, Jr., disagreed with the general conclusion of The American Voter, arguing in The Responsible Electorate that “voters are not fools.” He argued instead that voters tend to “switch” strategically, punishing or rewarding the incumbent party in elections. This means that when voters seem to support opposing ideologies or parties, their behavior is far from irrational. Instead, it is based on strategic evaluations of the party in power.

Voters might make decisions based on prospective or retrospective voting. Prospective voting means that voters base decisions on what might happen in the future, whereas retrospective voting means they base decisions on the past. Key held that most voting decisions were retrospective.

For a challenge to the retrospective theory of voting behavior, read this paper, Blind Retrospection: Why Shark Attacks are Bad for Democracy, by Larry Bartels and Chris Achen. The paper has garnered a great deal of attention with the results of the 2016 election. Many argue that voters in this race elected a candidate that does not represent their best interests. They wonder if voters are indeed rational in making the voting decision.

Recounting the events of a series of shark attacks in New Jersey in 1917, (on which the Jaws movies were based on), Bartels and Achen, argue that retrospective voting is “blind.” Voters in New Jersey seemed to blame incumbent presidential candidate Wilson for shark attacks he clearly had no responsibility for. This view challenges the “responsible electorate” position, holding that voters can be more irrational than is often presumed. This “shark attack” argument suggest that voters are not sophisticated and can be irrational about the decision to vote. What do you think? How do you think this “shark attack” theory applies to the current pandemic and the 2020 election?

Sample Solution

The United States is home to the absolute generally famous and productive chronic executioners ever. Names, for example, Ted Bundy, Gary Ridgeway, and the Zodiac Killer have become commonly recognized names because of the terrible idea of their violations. Quite possibly the most productive chronic executioners in American history is John Wayne Gacy. Nicknamed the Killer Clown on account of his calling, Gacy assaulted and killed at any rate 33 adolescent young men and youngsters somewhere in the range of 1972 and 1978, which is one of the most noteworthy realized casualty tallies. Gacy’s story has become so notable that his violations have been highlighted in mainstream society and TV shows, for example, American Horror Story: Hotel and Criminal Minds. Criminological science has, and proceeds to, assume a significant job in the settling of the case and recognizable proof of the people in question. John Wayne Gacy’s set of experiences of sexual and psychological mistreatment was instrumental in provoking examiner’s curiosity of him as a suspect. John Wayne Gacy was brought into the world on March 17, 1942, in Chicago, Illinois. Being the solitary child out of three kids, Gacy had a stressed relationship with his dad, who drank vigorously and was frequently injurious towards the whole family (Sullivan and Maiken 48). In 1949, a contractual worker, who was a family companion, would stroke Gacy during rides in his truck; nonetheless, Gacy never uncovered these experiences to his folks because of a paranoid fear of retaliation from his dad (Foreman 54). His dad’s mental maltreatment proceeded into his young grown-up years, and Gacy moved to Las Vegas where he worked quickly in the emergency vehicle administration prior to turning into a funeral home orderly (Sullivan and Maiken 50). As a morgue chaperon, Gacy was vigorously engaged with the preserving cycle and conceded that one night, he moved into the final resting place of an expired high school kid and stroked the body (Cahill and Ewing 46). Stunned at himself, Gacy re-visitations of Chicago to live with his family and graduates from Northwestern Business College in 1963, and acknowledges an administration student position with Nunn-Bush Shoe Company. In 1964, Gacy is moved to Springfield and meets his future spouse, Marlynn Myers. In Springfield, Gacy has his subsequent gay experience when an associate unsteadily performed oral sex on him (London 11:7). Gacy moves to Waterloo, Iowa, and starts a family with Myers. Be that as it may, after routinely undermining his significant other with whores, Gacy submits his originally known rape in 1967 upon Donald Vorhees. In the coming months, Gacy explicitly mishandles a few different young people and is captured and accused of oral homosexuality (Sullivan and Maiken 60). On December 3, 1968, Gacy is indicted and condemned to ten years at the Anamosa State Penitentiary. Gacy turns into a model prisoner at Anamosa and is allowed parole in June of 1970, an only a short time after his condemning. He had to migrate to Chicago and live with his mom and notice a 10:00PM check in time. Not exactly a year later, Gacy is accused again of explicitly attacking a young kid yet the adolescent didn’t show up in court, so the charges were dropped. Gacy was known by numerous individuals in his locale to be an eager volunteer and being dynamic in network governmental issues. His job as “Pogo the Clown” the comedian started in 1975 when Gacy joined a nearby “Cheerful Joker” jokester club that consistently performed at raising support occasions. On January 3, 1972, Gacy submits his first homicide of Timothy McCoy, a 16-year old kid venturing out from Michigan to Omaha. Asserting that McCoy went into his room employing a kitchen blade, Gacy gets into an actual quarrel with McCoy prior to cutting him consistently in the chest. Subsequent to understanding that McCoy had absentmindedly strolled into the live with the blade while attempting to plan breakfast, Gacy covers the body in his unfinished plumbing space. Gacy conceded in the meetings following his capture that slaughtering McCoy gave him a “mind-desensitizing climax”, expressing that this homicide was the point at which he “understood passing was a definitive rush” (Cahill and Ewing 349). Right around 2 years after the fact, Gacy submits his second homicide of a unidentified young person. Gacy choked the kid prior to stuffing the body in his storeroom prior to covering him (Cahill 349). In 1975, Gacy’s business was developing rapidly and his hunger for youngsters developed with it. Gacy frequently attracted youngsters under his work to his home, persuading them to place themselves in binds, and assaulting and tormenting them prior to choking them (Cahill 169-170). The vast majority of Gacy’s killings occurred somewhere in the range of 1976 and 1978, the first of this time occurring in April 1976. A considerable lot of the young people that were killed during this time were covered in an unfinished plumbing space under Gacy’s home. For the rest of the homicides, Gacy confessed to losing five bodies the I-55 extension into the Des Plaines River; nonetheless, just four of the bodies were ever recuperated (Linedecker 152). In December 1978, Gacy meets Robert Jerome Piest, a 15-year old kid working at a drug store and offers him an employment at Gacy’s firm. Piest educates his mom regarding this and neglects to restore that night. The Piest family documents a missing individual’s report and the drug specialist advises police that Gacy would in all probability be the man that Jerome addressed about a work. When addressed by the police, Gacy denied any contribution in Piest’s vanishing. Notwithstanding, the police were not persuaded, and Gacy’s set of experiences of sexual maltreatment and battery provoked the police to look through his home. Among the things found at Gacy’s home were a 1975 secondary school class ring with the initials J.A.S., numerous driver’s licenses, binds, dress that was excessively little for Gacy, and a receipt for the drug store that Piest had worked at. Throughout the following not many days, agents got numerous calls and tips about Gacy’s rapes and the strange vanishings of Gacy’s workers. The class ring was ultimately followed back to John A. Szyc, one of Gacy’s casualties in 1977. Futhermore, after inspecting Gacy’s vehicle, examiners found a little bunch of filaments looking like human hair, which were shipped off the labs for additional examination. That very night, search canines were utilized to recognize any hint of Piest in Gacy’s vehicle, and one of the canines demonstrated that Piest had, truth be told, been available in the vehicle. On December 20, 1977, under the pressure of steady police reconnaissance and examination, Gacy admits to more than 30 homicides and advises his attorney and companion where the bodies were covered, both in the unfinished plumbing space and the waterway. 26 casualties were found in the unfinished plumbing space and 4 in the waterway. Gacy is captured, indicted for 33 killings, and condemned to death by deadly infusion. He endeavored a madness request yet was denied, and was executed on May 10, 1994. There were a few legal pointers that specialists used to attach Gacy to the homicides. A portion of these include fiber examination, dental and radiology records, utilizing the decay cycle of the human body, and facial reproduction in recognizing the people in question. Examiners discovered filaments that looked like human hair in both Gacy’s vehicle and close to the unfinished plumbing space where the bodies were covered. Notwithstanding these hair tests, specialists likewise discovered strands that contained hints of Gacy’s blood and semen in a similar territory. Blood having a place with the casualties was found on a portion of the strands, which would later straightforwardly attach Gacy to the violations. The filaments in Gacy’s vehicle were investigated by criminological researchers and coordinated Piest’s hair tests. Besides, the pursuit canines that verified that Piest had been in Gacy’s vehicle showed this by a “passing response”, which told agents that Piest’s dead body had been within Gacy’s vehicle. Out of Gacy’s 33 known casualties, just 25 were ever indisputably distinguished. Large numbers of Gacy’s casualties had comparable actual portrayals and were along these lines hard to distinguish by absolutely asking people in general. To distinguish the people in question, specialists went to Betty Pat Gatliff, a pioneer in scientific science and facial remaking. Facial remaking is the way toward reproducing the facial highlights of a person by utilizing their remaining parts. Certain facial highlights, for example, facial structures, nasal structure, and by and large face shape can be helpful in distinguishing a casualty even long in the afterlife. By utilizing these highlights, and with the assistance of program, scientific examiners can make a picture of an individual’s face, which is instrumental in distinguishing casualties after their bodies have rotted. Facial remaking should be possible in a few measurements. Two-dimensional facial recreations is utilized with skull radiographs and depend on pre-demise photos and data. Be that as it may, this isn’t really ideal in light of the fact that cranial highlights are not generally obvious or at the correct scale (Downing). To get a sensible and more precise portrayal of the casualty’s face, a craftsman and a measurable anthropologist are generally fundamental (Downing). Three-dimensional facial remaking is finished by figures or high goal, three-dimensional pictures. PC programs can make facial reproductions by controlling filtered photos of the remaining parts and use approximations to reproduce facial highlights. These will in general create results that don’t look fake (Reichs and Craig 491). Now and then, examiners will utilize a strategy called superimposition as a method for facial remaking. Lamentably, it’s anything but a normally utilized strategy, as it expects examiners to have some information about the personality of the remaining parts they are managing. By superimposing a photo of a person over the skeletal remaining parts, examiners can check whether the facial highlights line up with the anatomical highlights, permitting them to distinguish a casualty. On account of John Wayne Gacy’s casualties, specialists had the option to utilize facial remaking to recognize nine of the bodies found in the unfinished plumbing space. The accompanying realistic shows the facial reproductions of these nine casualties: Since facial remaking was adequately not to distinguish the entirety of the v>

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