US campaign finance and direct democracy Flashcards

1
Q

self funded

A

Trump $66m into 2016 campaign but $8000 2020.
freedom from influence of donors. free of gov restrictions except disclosing to FEC.
perception that politics only for wealthy

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2
Q

donations (hard money)

A

to specific candidates from supporters.
limited 2002- none over $2,800.
PACs- raise money for candidates up to $5000

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3
Q

donations (soft money)

A

indirectly spent to promote candidates or attack opponents
super pacs- cant coordinate with candidates’ campaigns

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4
Q

government funds

A

Obama 2008 rejected idea of gov matching donations in return for donation cap- could raise more than the cap by himself.
Romney used gov funds- last person to date

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5
Q

arguments for campaign finance being regulated

A
  1. election expenditure out of control. e.g. 2020 $14b- more money than previous 2 combined
  2. fundraising distracts from real job, especially house reelected 2 years- constant campaigning
  3. cost of elections = only wealthy and well connected can afford. e.g Trump $66m own money 2016
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6
Q

arguments against campaign finance being regulated

A
  1. fundraising & donations important part of democratic process- supporters show loyalty (hard money)
  2. first amendment right- political activity e.g. McCutcheon v FEC
  3. candidates still listen to wide range of voters- unwise to only be influenced by wealthy
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7
Q

Buckley v. Valeo 1976

A

Buckley: money spent in campaigns was form of politcal expression not fincancial transaction
therefore regs violate 1st amendment.
SC: regs only cons. if focused on corruption so uncons due to no focus on this

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8
Q

bipartisan campaign reform act 2002

A

stopped corporation “soft money”
defined poltical issue ads paid for by corps as “electioneering communications”
can’t broadcast within 30 days of primary or 60 of general election.
however 2007 FEC v Wisconsin, bans on corps paying for ads is uncons.

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9
Q

McCutcheon v. FEC 2014

A

SC strike down caps on amount total amount people can donate to campaigns in total
5-4 that it limits free speech
however, didn’t impact limits to single candidate by single donor

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10
Q

ballot initiatives

A

laws proposed by voters; if enough signatures, placed on ballot at election time
e.g. compulsory wearing of condoms by actors in adult movies initiative California 2016

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11
Q

recall elections

A

voters force elected state official to face re-election before term over
e.g. 2012 Scott Waker Wisconsin R senator opp to leg restricitng public sector working rights. survived re-election
has been successful
e.g. Gray Davis California replaced by Arnold Schwarzenegger

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12
Q

referendums

A

state legislatures pass law but must submit to voters for approval
e.g. 2018 Alabama 78% voters supported state constitution amendment to allow display of 10 commandments in state courthouses

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13
Q

money spent on direct democracy

A

vast sums spent
2020 total raised on campaigning over DD measures was $1.2b.
over $220 California alone on 1 initiative on app-based taxi drivers

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14
Q

arguments for DD working well

A
  1. allows variation of laws between states e.g. Alabama amendment
  2. opps for pressure groups to be involved e.g. NRA 2014 backed measure in Alabama to strengthen 2nd amendment rights
  3. improves accountability of state officials e.g. Scott Waker
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15
Q

arguments against DD working well

A
  1. already enough checks and balances (vetoes). adds opp for stalement and limits governers to do job
  2. parties exploit DD to influence other election outcomes e.g. North Dakota 2018 Ds initiative on legalising of cannibis to attract young voters to vote for senator Heidi Heitkamp
  3. “democratic overload”- ballots long and complex increasing costs of elections
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16
Q

split ticket voting

A

used to be regular but has decreased
2016: every senate race correspond with how state voted in pres election
1982: midterms D won 17/28 senate contests held in states Reagan had won 1980

17
Q

consequences of split ticket voting

A

-divided gov
-split senate delegations e.g. 2020-22, 6 states incl. Ohio
-reps from split districts careful how they vote and support pres.

18
Q

low abstention levels

A

2016: 55% voting age population for pres. race, but 87% registered voters

2020: increased to 66%- Trump was polarising, and COVID-19 meant easier to vote by mail

19
Q

low absention in primaries

A

usually lower for primaries- around 30%
due to most ideological turnout and candidates pitch to extreme wings
e.g. 2017 Alabama senate by-election R selected controversial Roy Moore, but lost to D in election

20
Q

reasons for high abstention

A
  • voter fatigue- so many ballots e.t.c feel disenfranchised with politics
    -many states uncompetitive- victory same party so vote little difference