United States Elections 2008
Primary Elections
Candidates Primary Elections
2008
The
series of Presidential primary elections and
caucuses is one of the first steps in the process of
electing the
President
of the United States of America. The
primary elections
are run by state and local governments in the states
which do not have caucuses. A
state primary election usually determines which
candidates for president will be supported by that
state at the national convention of each
political party.
Process
The
political parties each officially nominate their
candidate for President at their
national convention, usually the summer before
the election. Depending on state law, when voters
cast ballots for a candidate in a presidential
caucus or primary, they may be actually voting to
award delegates "bound" to
caucuses—both of the two largest parties (Democratic
and
Republican) have provisions for "superdelegates"
chosen outside the primary system.
In
recent elections, the eventual nominee is known well
before the actual convention takes place. The last
time a major party's nominee was not clear before
the convention was in
1976, when incumbent president
Gerald Ford narrowly
defeated Ronald Reagan.
Types of primary
Franchise in a primary is governed by rules
established by the state party, although the states
may impose other regulations.
Nearly all states have a
binding primary, in
which the results of the election legally
bind
some or all of the delegates to vote for a
particular candidate at the national convention, for
a certain number of ballots or until the candidate
releases the delegates. A handful of states practice
a
non-binding primary, which may select
candidates to a state convention which then selects
delegates. Both major parties have rules which
designate superdelegates.
In
most states, only voters registered with a party may
vote in that party's primary, known as a
closed primary. In
some states, a
semi-closed primary is practiced, in which
voters unaffiliated with a party (independents) may
choose a party primary in which to vote. In an
open primary, any voter
may vote in any party's primary. In all of these
systems, a voter may participate in only one
primary; that is, a voter who casts a vote for a
candidate standing for the Republican nomination for
president cannot cast a vote for a candidate
standing for the Democratic nomination, or vice
versa. A few states once staged a
blanket primary, in
which voters could vote for one candidate in
multiple primaries, but the practice was struck down
by the
U.S. Supreme Court in the 2000 case of
California Democratic Party v. Jones as
violating the freedom
of assembly guaranteed by the
First Amendment.
Under the 2008 Democratic Party
selection rules, adopted in 2006,
delegates are selected under
proportional
representation, with a candidate requiring a
minimum threshold of 15% in a state in order to
receive delegates. In addition, the Democratic Party
has the right to reject any candidate under their
bylaws. Each state publishes a Delegate Selection
Plan that notes the mechanics of calculating the
number of delegates per
congressional
district, and how votes are transferred from
local conventions to the state and national
convention. The Republican Party adopted its rules
at the time of the 2004
convention. There are no provisions requiring
proportional representation, and as such, many
states used the winner take all method in
2004.
History
There is no provision for the role of political
parties in the
United States Constitution, as political parties
did not develop until the early
19th century. Before
1820,
Democratic-Republican members of Congress would
nominate a single candidate from their party. That
system collapsed in 1824, and by 1832 the preferred
mechanism for nomination was a
national convention.
Delegates to the national convention were usually
selected at state conventions whose own delegates
were chosen by district conventions. Sometimes they
were dominated by intrigue between
political bosses who
controlled delegates; the national convention was
far from democratic or transparent.
Progressive Era
reformers looked to the
primary election as a way to measure popular
opinion of candidates, as opposed to the opinion of
the bosses. In 1910, Oregon became the first state
to establish a presidential preference primary in
which the delegates to the National Convention were
required to support the winner of the primary at the
convention. By 1912, twelve states either selected
delegates in primaries, used a preferential primary,
or both. By 1920 there were 20 states with
primaries, but some went back and from 1936 to 1968,
13 or 14 states used them. (Ware p 248)
The
primary received its first major test in the
1912 election pitting incumbent President
William Howard Taft
against challengers
Theodore Roosevelt and
Woodrow Wilson. Roosevelt proved the most
popular candidate, but as most primaries were
non-binding "preference" shows and held in only
fourteen of the-then forty-eight states, the
Republican nomination went to Taft, who controlled
the convention.
Seeking to boost voter
turnout, New Hampshire
simplified its ballot
access laws in 1949. In the ensuing "beauty
contest" of 1952, Republican
Dwight Eisenhower
demonstrated his broad voter appeal by out polling
the favored Robert A. Taft,
"Mr. Republican." Also, Democrat
Estes Kefauver
defeated incumbent President
Harry S. Truman,
leading the latter to abandon his campaign for
another term. The first-in-the-nation
New Hampshire
primary has since become a widely-observed test
of candidates' viability.
The
impetus for national adoption of the binding primary
election was the chaotic
1968
Democratic National Convention. Vice President
Hubert Humphrey II
secured the nomination despite primary victories and
other shows of support for Senator
Eugene McCarthy,
running against Humphrey on a strong anti-Vietnam
War platform. After this, a
Democratic
National Committee-commissioned panel led by
Senator George McGovern
recommended that states adopt new rules to assure
wider participation. A large number of states, faced
with the need to conform to more detailed rules for
the selection of national delegates, chose a
presidential primary as an easier way to come into
compliance with the new national Democratic Party
rules. The result was that many more future
delegates would be selected by a state presidential
primary. The Republicans also adopted many more
state presidential primaries.
With the broadened use of the primary system, states
have tried to increase their influence in the
nomination process. One tactic has been to create
geographic blocs to encourage candidates to spend
time in a region. Vermont and
Massachusetts attempted
to stage a joint New England
primary on the first Tuesday of March, but New
Hampshire refused to participate so it could retain
its traditional place as the first primary. The
first successful regional primary was
Super Tuesday of
March 8, 1988,
in which nine
Southern states united in the hope that the
Democrats would select a candidate in line with
Southern interests.
Another trend is to stage earlier and earlier
primaries, given impetus by Super Tuesday and the
mid-1990s move (since repealed) of the
California primary and its
bloc of votes—the largest in the nation—from June to
March. In order to retain its tradition as the first
primary in the country (and adhere to a state law
which requires it to be), New Hampshire's primary
has moved forward steadily, from early March to
early January.
Criticisms
Representativeness
Great attention is paid to the results of the Iowa
caucuses and the New Hampshire primary; however,
critics, such as Mississippi secretary of state Eric
Clark (see quote below), and Tennessee Senator
William Brock, point out that these states are not
representative of the United States as a whole: they
are overwhelmingly white,
more rural, and wealthier than the national average,
and neither is in the fast-growing
West or
South. For
example, New Jersey and
Montana, which are the last
states to have their primaries, usually end up
having no say in who the presidential candidate will
be; in 2004, they had their primaries in June, 13
weeks after Senator John Kerry
became unopposed. The New Jersey primary has been
moved to February for the 2008 election.
Although the addition of Nevada
to the early primaries in 2008
was done to equalize representativeness in the
country, this change does little to represent the
entire country.
In
2005, the primary commission of the Democratic
National Committee began considering removing New
Hampshire and Iowa from the top of the calendar. A
revised system was supposed to take effect beginning
in 2008; however, it has not received approval, so
New Hampshire and Iowa are still the first primaries
in 2008. New Hampshire is fighting back by obliging
candidates who want to campaign in the state to
pledge to uphold that primary as the first one.
Front-loading and
compression
States vie for earlier primaries in order to claim
greater influence in the nomination process, as the
early primaries can act as a signal to the nation,
showing which candidates are popular and giving
those who perform well early on the advantage of the
bandwagon effect.
Also, candidates can ignore primaries which fall
after the nomination has already been secured, and
would owe less to those states politically. As a
result, rather than stretching from March to July,
most primaries take place in a compressed time frame
in February and March. National party leaders also
have an interest in compressing the primary calendar,
as it enables the party to reduce the chance of a
bruising internecine battle and to preserve
resources for the general campaign.
In
such a primary season, however, many primaries will
fall on the same day, forcing candidates to choose
where to spend their time and resources. Indeed,
Super Tuesday was
created deliberately to increase the influence of
the South. When states cannot agree to coordinate
primaries, however, attention flows to larger states
with large numbers of delegates at the expense of
smaller ones. Because the candidate's time is
limited, paid advertising may play a greater role.
Moreover, a compressed calendar limits the ability
of lesser-known candidates to corral resources and
raise their visibility among voters, especially when
a better-known candidate enjoys the financial and
institutional backing of the party establishment.
In
an article from
Detroit News, Tennessee
Senator William (Bill) Brock
said about front-running, "Today, too many people in
too many states have no voice in the election of our
major party nominees. For them, the nominations are
over before they have begun."
Reform proposals
There are several proposals for reforming the
primary system. Some have called for a single
nationwide primary to be held on one day. Others
point out that requiring candidates to campaign in
every state simultaneously would exacerbate the
purported problem of campaigns being dominated by
the candidates who raise the most money. The
following proposals attempt to return the primary
system to a more relaxed schedule, and would help
less-funded candidates by lowering the cost of
entry.
Graduated Random
Presidential Primary System (American Plan)
One
reform concept is the
graduated random presidential primary system,
variations of which have been referred to as the
American Plan or the California Plan. This plan
starts with small primaries, and gradually moves up
to larger ones, in 10 steps, with states chosen at
random. The idea is that fewer initial primaries,
typically in smaller states, would allow grassroots
campaigns to score early successes and pick up
steam. However, since states are chosen at random,
travel costs may still be significant.
Delaware Plan
A
commission empaneled by the Republican National
Committee recommended the
Delaware Plan in 2000. This plan had states
grouped by size into four groups, with the smallest
primaries first, then the next-smallest, and so on.
Populous states objected to the plan, however,
because it would have always scheduled their
primaries at the end of the season. Other criticisms
included the wide geographic range of the states,
necessitating high travel costs. The Delaware Plan
was put to vote at
Republican
National Convention of 2000 and rejected.
Rotating Regional Primary
System
The
National Association of Secretaries of State has
endorsed a
Rotating
Regional Primary System, with the country split
into four regions: the West, the Midwest, the South,
and the Northeast. Unlike the Delaware Plan and the
American Plan, the Rotating Regional Primary System
would lower campaigning costs by restricting groups
of primaries to single, contiguous regions.
Criticisms of the regional plan include the higher
entry costs than the other plans (since 1/4 of the
country would vote in the first regional), and the
political bias of certain regions (the South or the
Northeast) unduly influencing the selection of a
nominee.
Interregional Primary Plan
In
the
Interregional Primary Plan the country is
divided into geographical regions. On each primary
date from March to June, one state from each of six
regions votes. Each election date would contain a
wide variety of perspectives. The order of the
states in each region is set by a lottery. In a
24-year cycle, every state would have a chance to be
among the first primary states. The primary
criticism of this plan is that travel costs would be
quite high: in each round, candidates would
essentially have to cover the entire country in
order to effectively campaign. Contrary to most
reform plans, this would reduce the ability of
lesser-funded candidates to build up from small
contests to large ones.
National Primary
Many have proposed a
National Primary, a single day on which all
state primaries and caucuses would be held.