16.1.2

Primaries

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Primaries and caucuses

States use primaries and caucuses to choose presidential nominees.

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Primaries vs caucuses

  • A primary is an election to choose each party’s candidate to run in the presidential election.
    • People voting can just cast a ballot then leave.
  • A caucus is a meeting to choose a party’s candidate for the presidential election.
    • There is a discussion, then the group decides on the nomination.
    • Caucuses are held in large states which are thinly populated.
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Primary functions

  • Primary elections choose delegates to go to the national party conventions.
  • Primary elections show how popular presidential candidates are.
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Primary process

  • Each state controls how its own primary or caucus is run.
  • States decide when primaries are held in between January and June.
    • Super Tuesday is a day in February or March when many states hold their primary or caucus.
    • In 2016 the Iowa caucus was the first primary in the Republican and Democrat primaries.
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Type of primary

  • States decide the type of primary election that takes place.
    • In closed primaries only registered Republicans can vote in the Republican primary and registered Democrats can vote in the Democratic primary.
    • In open primaries all registered voters can vote for a candidate.
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Delegates

  • States decide how delegates are allocated to the candidates.
    • The primary vote awards the successful candidates with state delegates who go to the National Party Convention and vote for them to be the party’s candidate.
    • In proportional primaries candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to their votes won.
    • In 'winner takes all' primaries the candidate with the most votes wins all the state delegates.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Primaries

Primaries offer both advantages and disadvantages to the American population.

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Large choice of candidates

  • Primaries offer a large choice of candidates to vote for.
    • In 2016 the Republican primary had 17 candidates.
  • Primaries give individuals outside of politics or major political positions the chance to run for election.
    • In 2016 Donald Trump was able to enter the Republican primary despite having no political experience.
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Length of process

  • The primary is a long and difficult contest which is appropriate for choosing a potential president, which is a highly demanding job.
  • However, suitable candidates can be put off from running in a primary because it is a long process, with some candidates entering months before the election, and very expensive.
    • Hillary Clinton raised $275 million in the 2016 Democrat primary.
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Unrepresentative process

  • Voters are unrepresentative of the American population, meaning that candidates can perform well at primaries despite not being representative of most Americans.
    • Primary voters are more ideological in their political views, older, wealthier and better educated than most of the US population.
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Personal Battle

  • Primaries can become a personal battle rather than about candidate’s policies and suitability for president.
    • In the primary for the 2016 election Donald Trump insulted other candidates including Jeb Bush who he called an “embarrassment to his family”.
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Voter turnout

  • Voter turnout at primaries is often low, particularly when a president is running for re-election as only one party has a serious primary content.

Jump to other topics

1Democracy & Participation

2Political Parties

3Electoral Systems

4Voting Behaviour & the Media

5Conservatism

6Liberalism

7Socialism

8The UK Constitution

9The UK Parliament

10The Prime Minister & the Executive

11Relationships Between Government Branches

12US Constitution & Federalism

13US Congress

14US Presidency

15US Supreme Court & Civil Rights

16US Democracy & Participation

17Comparing Democracies

18Feminism

19Nationalism

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