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Elections in the United States

In the politics of the United States, elections are held for government officials at the federal, state, and local levels. At the federal level, the nation's head of state, the president, is elected indirectly by the people of each state, through an Electoral College. Today, these electors almost always vote with the popular vote of their state. All members of the federal legislature, the Congress, are directly elected by the people of each state. There are many elected offices at state level, each state having at least an elective governor and legislature. There are also elected offices at the local level, in counties, cities, towns, townships, boroughs, and villages; as well as for special districts and school districts which may transcend county and municipal boundaries.

An 1846 painting by George Caleb Bingham showing a polling judge administering an oath to a voter

The country's election system is highly decentralized.[1] While the U.S. Constitution does set parameters for the election of federal officials, state law, not federal, regulates most aspects of elections in the U.S., including primary elections, the eligibility of voters (beyond the basic constitutional definition), the running of each state's electoral college, as well as the running of state and local elections. All elections—federal, state, and local—are administered by the individual states,[2] with many aspects of the system's operations delegated to the county or local level.[1]

Under federal law, the general elections of the president and Congress occur on Election Day, the Tuesday after the first Monday of November. These federal general elections are held in even-numbered years, with presidential elections occurring every four years, and congressional elections occurring every two years. The general elections that are held two years after the presidential ones are referred to as the midterm elections. General elections for state and local offices are held at the discretion of the individual state and local governments, with many of these races coinciding with either presidential or midterm elections as a matter of convenience and cost saving, while other state and local races may occur during odd-numbered "off years". The date when primary elections for federal, state, and local races occur are also at the discretion of the individual state and local governments; presidential primaries in particular have historically been staggered between the states, beginning sometime in January or February, and ending about mid-June before the November general election.

The restriction and extension of voting rights to different groups has been a contested process throughout United States history. The federal government has also been involved in attempts to increase voter turnout, by measures such as the National Voter Registration Act of 1993. The financing of elections has also long been controversial, because private sources make up substantial amounts of campaign contributions, especially in federal elections. Voluntary public funding for candidates willing to accept spending limits was introduced in 1974 for presidential primaries and elections. The Federal Elections Commission, created in 1975 by an amendment to the Federal Election Campaign Act, has the responsibility to disclose campaign finance information, to enforce the provisions of the law such as the limits and prohibitions on contributions, and to oversee the public funding of U.S. presidential elections.

Voting

Voting methods

 

Voting systems used in each state:

  Nonpartisan blanket primary and top two runoff general
  Nonpartisan blanket primary and top four instant-runoff general

The most common method used in U.S. elections is the first-past-the-post system, where the highest-polling candidate wins the election.[3] Under this system, a candidate only requires a plurality of votes to win, rather than an outright majority. Some may use a two-round system, where if no candidate receives a required number of votes (usually but not always a majority) then there is a runoff between the two candidates with the most votes.[citation needed]

Since 2002, several cities have adopted instant-runoff voting in their elections. Voters rank the candidates in order of preference rather than voting for a single candidate. If a candidate secures more than half of votes cast, that candidate wins. Otherwise, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated. Ballots assigned to the eliminated candidate are recounted and assigned to those of the remaining candidates who rank next in order of preference on each ballot. This process continues until one candidate wins by obtaining more than half the votes.[citation needed] In 2016, Maine became the first state to adopt instant-runoff voting (known in the state as ranked-choice voting) statewide for its elections, although due to state constitutional provisions, the system is only used for federal elections and state primaries.

Eligibility

The eligibility of an individual for voting is set out in the constitution and also regulated at state level. The constitution states that suffrage cannot be denied on grounds of race or color, sex, or age for citizens eighteen years or older. Beyond these basic qualifications, it is the responsibility of state legislatures to regulate voter eligibility. Some states ban convicted criminals, especially felons, from voting for a fixed period of time or indefinitely.[4] The number of American adults who are currently or permanently ineligible to vote due to felony convictions is estimated to be 5.3 million.[5] Some states also have legacy constitutional statements barring those legally declared incompetent from voting; such references are generally considered obsolete and are being considered for review or removal where they appear.[6]

About 4.3 million American citizens that reside in Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and other U.S. territories do not have the same level of federal representation as those that reside in the 50 U.S. states. These areas only have non-voting members in the U.S. House of Representatives and no representation in the U.S. Senate. Citizens in the U.S. territories are also not represented in the Electoral College and therefore cannot vote for the president.[7] Those in the Washington, D.C. are permitted to vote for the president because of the Twenty-third Amendment.

Voter registration

While the federal government has jurisdiction over federal elections, most election laws are decided at the state level. All U.S. states except North Dakota require that citizens who wish to vote be registered. In many states, voter registration takes place at the county or municipal level. Traditionally, voters had to register directly at state or local offices to vote, but in the mid-1990s, efforts were made by the federal government to make registering easier, in an attempt to increase turnout. The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (the "Motor Voter" law) required state governments that receive certain types of federal funding to make the voter registration process easier by providing uniform registration services through drivers' license registration centers, disability centers, schools, libraries, and mail-in registration. Other states allow citizens same-day registration on Election Day.

An estimated 50 million Americans are unregistered. It has been reported that registering to vote poses greater obstacles for low-income citizens, racial minorities and linguistic minorities, Native Americans, and persons with disabilities. International election observers have called on authorities in the U.S. to implement measures to remediate the high number of unregistered citizens.[8]

In many states, citizens registering to vote may declare an affiliation with a political party.[9] This declaration of affiliation does not cost money, and does not make the citizen a dues-paying member of a party. A party cannot prevent a voter from declaring his or her affiliation with them, but it can refuse requests for full membership. In some states, only voters affiliated with a party may vote in that party's primary elections (see below). Declaring a party affiliation is never required. Some states, including Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, Virginia, Wisconsin, and Washington, practice non-partisan registration.[10]

Voter ID Laws

 
Voter ID laws by state, as of April 2022:
  Photo ID required (Strict)
  Photo ID requested (Non-strict)
  Non-photo ID required (Strict)
  Non-photo ID requested (Non-strict)
  No ID required to vote

Voter ID laws in the United States are laws that require a person to provide some form of official identification before they are permitted to register to vote, receive a ballot for an election, or to actually vote in elections in the United States.

Proponents of voter ID laws argue that they reduce electoral fraud while placing only little burden on voters.

Absentee and mail voting

Sorting vote by mail envelopes, San Jose, Santa Clara County, California, 2018

Voters unable or unwilling to vote at polling stations on Election Day may vote via absentee ballots, depending on state law. Originally these ballots were for people who could not go to the polling place on election day. Now some states let them be used for convenience, but state laws still call them absentee ballots.[11] Absentee ballots can be sent and returned by mail, or requested and submitted in person, or dropped off in locked boxes. About half the states and territories allow "no excuse absentee," where no reason is required to request an absentee ballot; others require a valid reason, such as infirmity or travel.[11] Some states let voters with permanent disabilities apply for permanent absentee voter status, and some other states let all citizens apply for permanent status, so they will automatically receive an absentee ballot for each election.[12] Otherwise a voter must request an absentee ballot before the election occurs.

In Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Utah and Washington state, all ballots are delivered through the mail; in many other states there are counties or certain small elections where everyone votes by mail.[11][13]

As of July 2020, 26 states allow designated agents to collect and submit ballots on behalf of another voter, whose identities are specified on a signed application. Usually such agents are family members or persons from the same residence. 13 states neither enable nor prohibit ballot collection as a matter of law. Among those that allow it, 12 have limits on how many ballots an agent may collect.

Americans living outside the United States, including active duty members of the armed forces stationed outside of their state of residency, may register and vote under the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA). Almost half the states require these ballots to be returned by mail. Other states allow mail along with some combination of fax, or email; four states allow a web portal.[14]

A significant measure to prevent some types of fraud has been to require the voter's signature on the outer envelope, which is compared to one or more signatures on file before taking the ballot out of the envelope and counting it.[15] Not all states have standards for signature review.[16] There have been concerns that signatures are improperly rejected from young and minority voters at higher rates than others, with no or limited ability of voters to appeal the rejection.[17][18] For other types of errors, experts estimate that while there is more fraud with absentee ballots than in-person voting, it has affected only a few local elections.[19][20]

Following the 2020 United States presidential election, amidst disputes of its outcome, as a rationale behind litigation demanding a halt to official vote counting in some areas, allegations were made that vote counting is offshored. Former Trump Administration official Chris Krebs, head of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) during the election, said in a December 2020 interview that, "All votes in the United States of America are counted in the United States of America."[21]

One documented trend is that in-person votes and early votes are more likely to lean to the Republican Party, while the provisional ballots, which are counted later, trend to the Democratic Party. This phenomenon is known as blue shift, and has led to situations where Republicans won on election night only to be overtaken by Democrats after all votes were counted.[22] Foley did not find that mail-in or absentee votes favored either party.[23]

Early voting

Early voting is a formal process where voters can cast their ballots prior to the official Election Day. Early voting in person is allowed in 33 states and in Washington, D.C., with no excuse required.[24]

Voting equipment

Prevalence of voting technology in the US in 1980 and 2008[25]
Voting technology 1980 prevalence 2008 prevalence
Hand-counted paper ballot 10% < 1%
Lever machine 40% 6%
Punch card ~33% negligible
Optical scan 2% 60%
DRE < 1% ~33–38%

The earliest voting in the US was through paper ballots that were hand-counted. By the late 1800s, paper ballots printed by election officials were nearly universal. By 1980, 10% of American voters used paper ballots that were counted by hand, which dropped below 1% by 2008.[25]

Mechanical voting machines were first used in the US in the 1892 elections in Lockport, New York. The state of Massachusetts was one of the first states to adopt lever voting machines, doing so in 1899, but the state's Supreme Judicial Court ruled their usage unconstitutional in 1907. Lever machines grew in popularity despite controversies, with about two-thirds of votes for president in the 1964 United States presidential election cast with lever machines. Lever machine use declined to about 40% of votes in 1980, then 6% in 2008. Punch card voting equipment was developed in the 1960s, with about one-third of votes cast with punch cards in 1980. New York was the last state to phase out lever voting in response to the 2000 Help America Vote Act (HAVA), which allocated funds for the replacement of lever machine and punch card voting equipment. New York replaced its lever voting with optical scanning in 2010.[25]

In the 1960s, technology was developed that enabled paper ballots filled with pencil or ink to be optically scanned rather than hand-counted. In 1980, about 2% of votes used optical scanning; this increased to 30% by 2000 and 60% by 2008. In the 1970s, the final major voting technology for the US was developed, the DRE voting machine. In 1980, less than 1% of ballots were cast with DRE. Prevalence grew to 10% in 2000, then peaked at 38% in 2006. Because DREs are fully digital, with no paper trail of votes, backlash against them caused prevalence to drop to 33% in 2010.[25]

The voting equipment used by a given US county is related to the county's historical wealth. A county's use of punch cards in the year 2000 was positively correlated with the county's wealth in 1969, when punch card machines were at their peak of popularity. Counties with higher wealth in 1989 were less likely to still use punch cards in 2000. This supports the idea that punch cards were used in counties that were well-off in the 1960s, but whose wealth declined in the proceeding decades. Counties that maintained their wealth from the 1960s onwards could afford to replace punch card machines as they fell out of favor.[25]

Levels of election

Federal elections

 
Voters cast ballots for the 2020 elections at Roosevelt High School in Des Moines, Iowa

The United States has a presidential system of government, which means that the executive and legislature are elected separately. Article II of the United States Constitution requires that the election of the U.S. president by the Electoral College must occur on a single day throughout the country; Article I established that elections for Congressional offices, however, can be held at different times. Congressional and presidential elections take place simultaneously every four years, and the intervening Congressional elections, which take place every two years, are called midterm elections.

The constitution states that members of the United States House of Representatives must be at least 25 years old, a citizen of the United States for at least seven years, and be a (legal) inhabitant of the state they represent. Senators must be at least 30 years old, a citizen of the United States for at least nine years, and be a (legal) inhabitant of the state they represent. The president and vice president must be at least 35 years old, a natural born citizen of the United States and a resident in the United States for at least fourteen years. It is the responsibility of state legislatures to regulate the qualifications for a candidate appearing on a ballot paper, although in order to get onto the ballot, a candidate must often collect a legally defined number of signatures.

Presidential elections

The president and the vice president are elected together in a presidential election.[26] It is an indirect election, with the winner being determined by votes cast by electors of the Electoral College. In modern times, voters in each state select a slate of electors from a list of several slates designated by different parties or candidates, and the electors typically promise in advance to vote for the candidates of their party (whose names of the presidential candidates usually appear on the ballot rather than those of the individual electors). The winner of the election is the candidate with at least 270 Electoral College votes. It is possible for a candidate to win the electoral vote, and lose the (nationwide) popular vote (receive fewer votes nationwide than the second ranked candidate). Prior to ratification of the Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1804), the runner-up in a presidential election[27] became the vice president.

Electoral College votes are cast by individual states by a group of electors; each elector casts one electoral college vote. Until the Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution of 1961, citizens from the District of Columbia did not have representation and/or electors in the electoral college. In modern times, with electors usually committed to vote for a party candidate in advance, electors that vote against the popular vote in their state are called faithless electors, and occurrences are rare. State law regulates how states cast their electoral college votes. In all states except Maine and Nebraska, the candidate that wins the most votes in the state receives all its electoral college votes (a "winner takes all" system). From 1969 in Maine, and from 1991 in Nebraska, two electoral votes are awarded based on the winner of the statewide election, and the rest (two in Maine, three in Nebraska) go to the highest vote-winner in each of the state's congressional districts.

Congressional elections

Congress has two chambers: the Senate and the House of Representatives.

Senate elections

The Senate has 100 members, elected for a six-year term in dual-seat constituencies (2 from each state), with one-third being renewed every two years. The group of the Senate seats that is up for election during a given year is known as a "class"; the three classes are staggered so that only one of the three groups is renewed every two years. Until the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913, states chose how to elect Senators, and they were often elected by state legislatures, not the electorate of states.

House of Representatives elections
 
A chart of party balance in the House from 1789 to 2004

The House of Representatives has 435 members, elected for a two-year term in single-seat constituencies. House of Representatives elections are held every two years on the first Tuesday after November 1 in even years. Special House elections can occur between if a member dies or resigns during a term. House elections are first-past-the-post elections that elect a Representative from each of 435 House districts that cover the United States. The non-voting delegates of Washington, D.C., and the territories of American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands are also elected.

House elections occur every two years, correlated with presidential elections or halfway through a president's term. The House delegate of Puerto Rico, officially known as the resident commissioner of Puerto Rico, is elected to a four-year term, coinciding with those of the President.

As the redistricting commissions of states are often partisan, districts are often drawn which benefit incumbents. An increasing trend has been for incumbents to have an overwhelming advantage in House elections, and since the 1994 election, an unusually low number of seats has changed hands in each election.[citation needed] Due to gerrymandering, fewer than 10% of all House seats are contested in each election cycle. Over 90% of House members are reelected every two years, due to lack of electoral competition. Gerrymandering of the House, combined with the general deficiencies of the first-past-the-post voting system, and divisions inherent in the design of the Senate and of the Electoral College, result in a discrepancy between the percentage of popular support for various political parties and the actual level of the parties' representation. In particular, gerrymandering has been found to benefit the Republican Party more than it does the Democratic Party.[28]

State elections

State law and state constitutions, controlled by state legislatures regulate elections at state level and local level. Various officials at state level are elected. Since the separation of powers applies to states as well as the federal government, state legislatures and the executive (the governor) are elected separately. Governors and lieutenant governors are elected in all states, in some states on a joint ticket and in some states separately, some separately in different electoral cycles. The governors of the territories of American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands are also elected. In some states, executive positions such as Attorney General and Secretary of State are also elected offices. All members of state legislatures and territorial jurisdiction legislatures are elected. In some states, members of the state supreme court and other members of the state judiciary are elected. Proposals to amend the state constitution are also placed on the ballot in some states.

As a matter of convenience and cost saving, elections for many of these state and local offices are held at the same time as either the federal presidential or midterm elections. There are a handful of states, however, that instead hold their elections during odd-numbered "off years."

Local elections

At the local level, county and city government positions are usually filled by election, especially within the legislative branch. The extent to which offices in the executive or judicial branches are elected vary from county-to-county or city-to-city. Some examples of local elected positions include sheriffs at the county level and mayors and school board members at the city level. Like state elections, an election for a specific local office may be held at the same time as either the presidential, midterm, or off-year elections.

Tribal elections

Many Native American tribal governmental positions, including executive and legislative positions, are typically filled by election. In some cases, tribal citizens elect council members who elect from among their body a chief executive. The number of positions and titles used vary from one tribal government to another, but common titles for the tribal government's chief executive terms include president, governor, principal chief, chair, and chief. These elections may be held in conjunction with federal, state, or local elections, but are often held independently under the authority of the tribe's office of elections.

Comparison of recent and upcoming election years

Basic rotation of U.S. general elections (fixed-terms only[1])
Year 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026
Type Midterm Off-yeara Presidential year Off-yearb Midterm
President No Yes No
Senate Class III (34 seats) No Class I (33 seats) No Class II (33 seats)
House All 435 seats[3] No All 435 seats[2] No All 435 seats[2]
Governor 36 states, DC, & 3 territories[4]
AL, AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IA, KS, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, NE, NV, NH, NM, NY, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, VT, WI, WY, DC (Mayor), GU, MP, VI
3 states
KY, LA, MS
11 states, 2 territories
DE, IN, MO, MT, NH, NC, ND, UT, VT, WA, WV, AS, PR
2 states
NJ, VA
36 states, DC, & 3 territories[4]
AL, AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IA, KS, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, NE, NV, NH, NM, NY, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, VT, WI, WY, DC (Mayor), GU, MP, VI
Lieutenant Governor[5] 10 states [6]
AL, AR, CA, GA, ID, NV, OK, RI, TX, VT
2 states
LA, MS
5 states, 1 territory
DE, MO, NC, VT, WA, AS
1 state
VA
10 states [6]
AL, AR, CA, GA, ID, NV, OK, RI, TX, VT
Secretary of State 26 states
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, MA, MI, MN, NE, NV, NM, ND, OH, RI, SC, TX, VT, WI, WY
2 states
KY, MS
8 states
MO, MT, NC, OR, PA, VT, WA, WV
None 26 states
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, MA, MI, MN, NE, NV, NM, ND, OH, RI, SC, TX, VT, WI, WY
Attorney General 29 states, DC, & 2 territories
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, FL, GA, ID, IL, IA, KS, MD, MA, MI, MN, NE, NV, NM, NY, ND, OH, OK, RI, SC, TX, VT, WI, WY, DC, GU, MP
2 states
KY, MS
10 states
IN, MO, MT, NC, OR, PA, UT, VT, WA, WV
1 state
VA
29 states, DC, & 2 territories
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, FL, GA, ID, IL, IA, KS, MD, MA, MI, MN, NE, NV, NM, NY, ND, OH, OK, RI, SC, TX, VT, WI, WY, DC, GU, MP
State Treasurer[7] 23 states
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, FL (CFO), ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, MA, NE, NV, NM, OH, OK, RI, SC, VT, WI, WY
2 states
KY, MS
9 states
MO, NC, ND, OR, PA, UT, VT, WA, WV
None 23 states
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, FL (CFO), ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, MA, NE, NV, NM, OH, OK, RI, SC, VT, WI, WY
State Comptroller/Controller 8 states
CA, CT, IL, MD, NV, NY, SC, TX
None None None 8 states
CA, CT, IL, MD, NV, NY, SC, TX
State Auditor 15 states
AL, AR, DE, IN, IA, MA, MN, MO, NE, NM, OH, OK, SD, VT, WY
1 state
KY
9 states
MT, NC, ND, PA, UT, VT, WA, WV, GU
None 15 states
AL, AR, DE, IN, IA, MA, MN, MO, NE, NM, OH, OK, SD, VT, WY
Superintendent of Public Instruction 8 states
AZ, CA, GA, ID, OK,
SC, SD (incl. Land), WY
None 4 states
MT, NC, ND, WA
1 state
WI
8 states
AZ, CA, GA, ID, OK,
SC, SD (incl. Land), WY
Agriculture Commissioner 7 states
AL, FL, GA, IA, ND, SC, TX
2 states
KY, MS
2 states
NC, WV
None 7 states
AL, FL, GA, IA, ND, SC, TX
Insurance Commissioner 5 states
DE, CA GA, KS, OK,
2 states
LA, MS
3 states
NC, ND, WA,
None 5 states
DE, CA GA, KS, OK,
Other commissioners & elected officials 8 states
AZ (Mine Inspector), AR (Land), GA (Land), NM (Land), ND (Tax), OK (Labor), OR (Labor), TX (Land)
None 1 state
NC (Labor)
None 8 states
AZ (Mine Inspector), AR (Land), GA (Land), NM (Land), ND (Tax), OK (Labor), OR (Labor), TX (Land)
State legislatures[8] 46 states, DC, & 4 territories
AK, AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IO, KS, KY, ME, MA, MD, MI, MN, MO, MN, NE, NV, NH, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV, WI, WY, DC, AS, GU, MP, VI
4 states
LA, MS, NJ, VA
44 states, DC, & 5 territories
AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IO, KS, KY, ME, MA, MI, MN, MO, MN, NE, NV, NH, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV, WI, WY, DC, AS, GU, MP, PR, VI
2 states
VA, NJ
46 states, DC, & 4 territories
AK, AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IO, KS, KY, ME, MA, MD, MI, MN, MO, MN, NE, NV, NH, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV, WI, WY, DC, AS, GU, MP, VI
State boards of education [9] 8 states, DC, & 3 territories
AL, CO, KS, MI, NE, OH, TX, UT, DC, GU, MP, VI
None 8 states, DC, & 3 territories
AL, CO, KS, MI, NE, OH, TX, UT, DC, GU, MP, VI
None 8 states, DC, & 3 territories
AL, CO, KS, MI, NE, OH, TX, UT, DC, GU, MP, VI
Other state, local, and tribal offices Varies
1 This table does not include special elections, which may be held to fill political offices that have become vacant between the regularly scheduled elections.
2 As well as all six non-voting delegates of the U.S. House.
3 As well as five non-voting delegates of the U.S. House. The Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico instead serves a four-year term that coincides with the presidential term.
4 The Governors of New Hampshire and Vermont are each elected to two-year terms. The other 48 state governors and all five territorial governors serve four-year terms.
5 In 26 states and 3 territories the Lieutenant Governor is elected on the same ticket as the Governor: AK, CO, CT, FL, HI, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, MD, MA, MI, MN, MT, NE, NJ, NM, NY, ND, OH, PA, SC, SD, UT, WI, GU, MP, VI.
6 Like the Governor, Vermont's other officials are each elected to two-year terms. All other state officers for all other states listed serve four-year terms.
7 In some states, the comptroller or controller has the duties equivalent to a treasurer. There are some states with both positions, so both have been included separately.
8 This list does not differentiate chambers of each legislature. Forty-nine state legislatures are bicameral; Nebraska is unicameral. Additionally, Washington, DC, Guam, and the US Virgin Islands are unicameral; the other territories are bicameral. All legislatures have varying terms for their members. Many have two-year terms for the lower house and four-year terms for the upper house. Some have all two-year terms and some all four-year terms. Arkansas has a combination of both two- and four-year terms in the same chamber.
9 Most states not listed here have a board appointed by the Governor and legislature. All boards listed here have members that serve four-year staggered terms, except Colorado, which has six-year terms, and Guam, which has two-year terms. Most are elected statewide, some are elected from districts. Louisiana, Ohio, Guam, and the Northern Mariana Islands have additional members who are appointed.

Features of the election system

Multiple levels of regulation

In the US, elections are actually conducted by local authorities, working under local, state, and federal law and regulation, as well as the US Constitution. It is a highly decentralized system.[1]

In around half of US states, the secretary of state is the official in charge of elections; in other states it is someone appointed for the job, or a commission.[1] It is this person or commission who is responsible for certifying, tabulating, and reporting votes for the state.[1]

Party systems

Americans vote for a specific candidate instead of directly selecting a particular political party. The United States Constitution has never formally addressed the issue of political parties. The Founding Fathers such as Alexander Hamilton and James Madison did not support domestic political factions at the time the Constitution was written.[29] In addition, the first president of the United States, George Washington, was not a member of any political party at the time of his election or throughout his tenure as president. Furthermore, he hoped that political parties would not be formed, fearing conflict and stagnation. Nevertheless, the beginnings of the American two-party system emerged from his immediate circle of advisers, with Hamilton and Madison ending up being the core leaders in this emerging party system. Due to Duverger's law, the two-party system continued following the creation of political parties, as the first-past-the-post electoral system was kept.

Candidates decide to run under a party label, register to run, pay filing fees, etc. In the primary elections, the party organization stays neutral until one candidate has been elected. The platform of the party is written by the winning candidate (in presidential elections; in other elections no platform is involved). Candidates formally manage the campaign and fund raising organization independent of the party. The primary elections in the main parties are organized by the states, who also register the party affiliation of the voters (this also makes it easier to gerrymander the congressional districts). The party is thus little more than a campaign organization for the main elections.

However, elections in the United States often do become de facto national races between the political parties. In what is known as "presidential coattails", candidates in presidential elections usually bring out supporters who then vote for his or her party's candidates for other offices, usually resulting in the presidential winner's party gaining seats in Congress. On the other hand, midterm elections are sometimes regarded as a referendum on the sitting president's and/or incumbent party's performance.[30][31]

Ballot access

Ballot access refers to the laws which regulate under what conditions access is granted for a candidate or political party to appear on voters' ballots. Each state has its own ballot access laws to determine who may appear on ballots and who may not. According to Article I, Section 4, of the United States Constitution, the authority to regulate the time, place, and manner of federal elections is up to each State, unless Congress legislates otherwise. Depending on the office and the state, it may be possible for a voter to cast a write-in vote for a candidate whose name does not appear on the ballot, but it is extremely rare for such a candidate to win office.

Campaign finance

The funding of electoral campaigns has always been a controversial issue in American politics. Infringement of free speech (First Amendment) is an argument against restrictions on campaign contributions, while allegations of corruption arising from unlimited contributions and the need for political equality are arguments for the other side.[32] Private funds are a major source of finance, from individuals and organizations. The first attempt to regulate campaign finance by legislation was in 1867, but major legislation, with the intention to widely enforce, on campaign finance was not introduced until the 1970s.

Money contributed to campaigns can be classified into "hard money" and "soft money". Hard money is money contributed directly to a campaign, by an individual or organization. Soft money is money from an individual or organization not contributed to a campaign, but spent in candidate specific advertising or other efforts that benefits that candidate by groups supporting the candidate, but legally not coordinated by the official campaign.

The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 required candidates to disclose sources of campaign contributions and campaign expenditure. It was amended in 1974 to legally limit campaign contributions. It banned direct contributing to campaigns by corporations and trade unions and limited individual donations to $1,000 per campaign. It introduced public funding for presidential primaries and elections. The Act also placed limits of $5,000 per campaign on PACs (political action committees). The limits on individual contributions and prohibition of direct corporate or labor union campaigns led to a huge increase in the number of PACs. Today many labor unions and corporations have their own PACs, and over 4,000 in total exist. The 1974 amendment also specified a Federal Election Commission, created in 1975 to administer and enforce campaign finance law. Various other provisions were also included, such as a ban on contributions or expenditures by foreign nationals (incorporated from the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) (1966)).

The case of Buckley v. Valeo (1976) challenged the Act. Most provisions were upheld, but the court found that the mandatory spending limit imposed was unconstitutional, as was the limit placed on campaign spending from the candidate's personal fortune and the provision that limited independent expenditures by individuals and organizations supporting but not officially linked to a campaign. The effect of the first decision was to allow candidates such as Ross Perot and Steve Forbes to spend enormous amounts of their own money in their own campaigns. The effect of the second decision was to allow the culture of "soft money" to develop.

A 1979 amendment to the Federal Election Campaign Act allowed political parties to spend without limit on get-out-the-vote and voter registration activities conducted primarily for a presidential candidate. Later, they were permitted by FECA to use "soft money", unregulated, unlimited contributions to fund this effort. Increasingly, the money began to be spent on issue advertising, candidate specific advertising that was being funded mostly by soft money.

The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 banned local and national parties from spending "soft money" and banned national party committees from accepting or spending soft money. It increased the limit of contributions by individuals from $1,000 to $2,000. It banned corporations or labor unions from funding issue advertising directly, and banned the use of corporate or labor money for advertisements that mention a federal candidate within 60 days of a general election or 30 days of a primary. The constitutionality of the bill was challenged and in December 2003, the Supreme Court upheld most provisions of the legislation. (See McConnell v. FEC.)

A large number of "527 groups" were active for the first time in the 2004 election. These groups receive donations from individuals and groups and then spend the money on issue advocacy, such as the anti-Kerry ads by Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. This is a new form of soft money, and not surprisingly it is controversial. Many 527 groups have close links with the Democratic or Republican parties, even though legally they cannot coordinate their activities with them. John McCain, one of the senators behind the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, and President Bush have both declared a desire to ban 527s.

Changing campaign finance laws is a highly controversial issue. Some reformers wish to see laws changed in order to improve electoral competition and political equality. Opponents wish to see the system stay as it is, whereas other reformers wish even fewer restrictions on the freedom to spend and contribute money. The Supreme Court has made it increasingly difficult for those who wish to regulate election financing, but options like partial public funding of campaigns are still possible and offer the potential to address reformers' concerns with minimal restrictions on the freedom to contribute.[33]

Primaries and caucuses

In partisan elections, candidates are chosen by primary elections (abbreviated to "primaries") and caucuses in the states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

A primary election is an election in which registered voters in a jurisdiction (nominating primary) select a political party's candidate for a later election. There are various types of primary: either the whole electorate is eligible, and voters choose one party's primary at the polling booth (an open primary); or only independent voters can choose a party's primary at the polling booth (a semi-closed primary); or only registered members of the party are allowed to vote (closed primary). The blanket primary, when voters could vote for all parties' primaries on the same ballot was struck down by the United States Supreme Court as violating the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of assembly in the case California Democratic Party v. Jones. Primaries are also used to select candidates at the state level, for example in gubernatorial elections.

Caucuses also nominate candidates by election, but they are very different from primaries. Caucuses are meetings that occur at precincts and involve discussion of each party's platform and issues such as voter turnout in addition to voting. Eleven states: Iowa, New Mexico, North Dakota, Maine, Nevada, Hawaii, Minnesota, Kansas, Alaska, Wyoming, Colorado and the District of Columbia use caucuses, for one or more political parties.

The primary and caucus season in presidential elections lasts from the Iowa caucus in January to the last primaries in June. Front-loading - when larger numbers of contests take place in the opening weeks of the season—can have an effect on the nomination process, potentially reducing the number of realistic candidates, as fund-raisers and donors quickly abandon those they see as untenable. However, it is not the case that the successful candidate is always the candidate that does the best in the early primaries. There is also a period dubbed the "invisible primary" that takes place before the primary season, when candidates attempt to solicit media coverage and funding well before the real primary season begins.

A state's presidential primary election or caucus usually is an indirect election: instead of voters directly selecting a particular person running for president, it determines how many delegates each party's national political convention will receive from their respective state. These delegates then in turn select their party's presidential nominee. Held in the summer, a political convention's purpose is also to adopt a statement of the party's principles and goals known as the platform and adopt the rules for the party's activities.

The day on which primaries are held for congressional seats, and state and local offices may also vary between states. The only federally mandated day for elections is Election Day for the general elections of the president and Congress; all other elections are at the discretion of the individual state and local governments.

Election information on the web

In most states of the U.S., the chief election officer is the secretary of state. In some states, local officials like a county registrar of voters or supervisor of elections manages the conduct of elections under the supervision of (or in coordination with) the chief election officer of the state. Many of these state and county offices have web sites that provide information to help voters obtain information on their polling places for each election, the various districts to which they belong (e.g., House and Senate districts in the state and federal legislature, school boards, water districts, municipalities, etc.), as well as dates of elections and deadlines to file to run or register to vote. Some allow voters to download a sample ballot in advance of the election.

Beyond this, various media outlets provide information they think will interest their audience.

More systematic coverage is provided by web sites devoted specifically to collecting election information and making it available to the public. Two of the better known such sites are Ballotpedia and Vote Smart. These are run by non-profit, non-partisan organizations. They have paid staffs and are much more tightly controlled than Wikipedia.

USElections.com[34] tries to provide similar information but relies on volunteers in a way that is more like Wikipedia than Ballotpedia and Vote Smart.

The website 270towin provides actual electoral college maps (both current and historic) but also the ability to use an interactive map in order to make election predictions. Ongoing election news is reported as well as data on Senate and House races.[35]

OpenSecrets provides election information focusing on campaign finance.

Criticisms

Voting laws and procedures between the states vary as a consequence of the decentralized system, including those pertaining to provisional ballots, postal voting, voter IDs, voter registration, voting machines and vote counting, felony disenfranchisement, and election recounts. Thus the voting rights or voter suppression in one state may be stricter or more lenient than another state.[36] More recently, following the 2020 US presidential election, decentralized administration and inconsistent state voting laws and processes have shown themselves to be targets for voter subversion schemes enabled by appointing politically-motivated actors to election administration roles with degrees of freedom to subvert the will of the people. One such scheme would allow these officials to appoint a slate of "alternate electors" to skew operations of the electoral college in favor of a minority party.[37]

As detailed in a state-by-state breakdown,[38] the United States has a long-standing tradition of publicly announcing the incomplete, unofficial vote counts on election night (the late evening of election day), and declaring unofficial "projected winners", despite that many of the mail-in and absentee votes have not been counted yet.[38] In some states, in fact, none of them have yet been counted by that time.[38] This tradition was based on the assumption that the incomplete, unofficial count on election night is probably going to match the official count, which is officially finished and certified several weeks later. An intrinsic weakness of this assumption, and of the tradition of premature announcements based on it, is that the public is likely to misapprehend that these particular "projected winning" candidates have certainly won before any official vote count has been completed, whereas in fact all that is truly known is that those candidates have some degree of likelihood of having won; the magnitude of the likelihood (all the way from very reliable to not reliable at all) varies by state because the details of election procedures vary by state.[38] This problem affects all non–in-person votes, even those cast weeks before election day—not just late-arriving ones.

In 2014, scientists from Princeton University did a study on the influence of the so-called "elite", and their derived power from special interest lobbying, versus the "ordinary" US citizen within the US political system. They found that the US was looking more like an oligarchy than a real representative democracy; thus eroding a government of the people, by the people, for the people as stated by Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg Address. In fact, the study found that average citizens had an almost nonexistent influence on public policies and that the ordinary citizen had little or no independent influence on policy at all.[39]

Attempts by foreign countries to influence the outcome have occurred in some elections.[40]

The Electoral College has been criticized by some people for being un-democratic (it can choose a candidate who did not win the popular vote) and for encouraging campaigns to only focus on swing states.[41]

Allegations of voter impersonation, of which there are only 31 documented cases in the United States from the 2000–2014 period, have led to calls for Voter ID laws in the United States.[42]

Notable instances of allegations of stolen elections and election fraud include the 1948 United States Senate election in Texas, in which 202 "patently fraudulent"[43]: 608  ballots gave future President Lyndon Johnson a seat in the US Senate and the 2018 North Carolina 9th congressional district election in which ballot tampering was admitted in witness testimony, including filling in blank votes to favor Republican candidates.[44]

Sanford Levinson argues that next to the fact that campaign financing and gerrymandering are seen as serious problems for democracy, also one of the root causes of the American democratic deficit lies in the United States Constitution itself,[45] for example there is a lack of proportional representation in the Senate for highly populated states such as California.[46]

The first-past-the-post system has also been criticized for creating a de facto pure two-party system (as postulated in Duverger's law) that suppresses voices that do not hold views consistent with the largest faction in a particular party, as well as limiting voters' choices in elections.[47][48]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Election Administration at State and Local Levels". National Conference of State Legislatures. June 15, 2016.
  2. ^ "Elections & Voting". whitehouse.gov. April 2, 2015. Retrieved October 14, 2017 – via National Archives.
  3. ^ Dunleavy, Patrick; Diwakar, Rekha (2013). "Analysing multiparty competition in plurality rule elections" (PDF). Party Politics. 19 (6): 855–886. doi:10.1177/1354068811411026. S2CID 18840573.
  4. ^ Gonchar, Michael (February 18, 2014). "Should Felons Be Allowed to Vote After They Have Served Their Time?". Learning.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved October 14, 2017.
  5. ^ (PDF). The Sentencing Project. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 31, 2009. Retrieved 2007-01-10.
  6. ^ DeFalco, Beth (January 9, 2007). "New Jersey to take 'idiots,' 'insane' out of state constitution?". Delaware News-Journal.
  7. ^ Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe, Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), "ODIHR Limited Election Observation Mission Final Report" VIII. Voting Rights, p. 13
  8. ^ Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe, Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), "ODIHR Limited Election Observation Mission Final Report" IX. Voter Registration, p. 12-13
  9. ^ "Home | League of Women Voters". www.lwv.org. Archived from the original on October 5, 2006.
  10. ^ . Project Vote Smart. Archived from the original on October 30, 2011. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  11. ^ a b c "Voting Outside the Polling Place: Absentee, All-Mail and other Voting at Home Options". www.ncsl.org. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  12. ^ "VOPP: Table 3: States With Permanent Absentee Voting". www.ncsl.org. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  13. ^ "VOPP: Table 18: States With All-Mail Elections". www.ncsl.org. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  14. ^ "Electronic Transmission of Ballots". www.ncsl.org. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  15. ^ (PDF). Stanford University. April 15, 2020. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 18, 2020. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  16. ^ (PDF). National Vote at Home Institute. May 2020. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 6, 2020. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  17. ^ Smith, Daniel (September 18, 2018). "Vote-By-Mail Ballots Cast in Florida" (PDF). ACLU-Florida. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  18. ^ Wilkie, Jordan (October 12, 2018). "Exclusive: High Rate of Absentee Ballot Rejection Reeks of Voter Suppression". Who What Why. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  19. ^ "Who Can Vote? - A News21 2012 National Project". Retrieved June 12, 2020.
  20. ^ Kahn, Natasha and Corbin Carson. "Investigation: election day fraud "virtually nonexistent"". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved June 15, 2020.
  21. ^ Krebs, Christopher Cox (November 29, 2020). "Fired director of U.S. cyber agency Chris Krebs explains why President Trump's claims of election interference are false". In Pelley, Scott Cameron (ed.). 60 Minutes. Season 53. Episode 13. Event occurs at 11:30. CBS. from the original on December 2, 2020.
  22. ^ Hyun, Michelle (March 30, 2020). "The Blue Shift in California Elections | Election Updates". electionupdates.caltech.edu. Retrieved August 1, 2020.
  23. ^ Graham, David A. (August 10, 2020). "The 'Blue Shift' Will Decide the Election". The Atlantic. Retrieved August 15, 2020.
  24. ^ "Absentee and Early Voting". National Conference of State Legislatures. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  25. ^ a b c d e Stewart, Charles (2011). "Voting Technologies". Annual Review of Political Science. 14: 353–378. doi:10.1146/annurev.polisci.12.053007.145205.
  26. ^ Statistics on the State of the Nation Before the Presidential Elections (2007 and 2011), Pew Research Center, 2011.
  27. ^ U.S. Elections 2012, The Economist, 2012
  28. ^ Associated Press, published in Business Insider, 25 June 2017 "Analysis: Partisan Gerrymandering Has Benefited Republicans More than Democrats"
  29. ^ In Federalist Papers No. 9 and No. 10, Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, respectively, wrote specifically about the dangers of domestic political factions.
  30. ^ Baker, Peter; VandeHei, Jim (November 8, 2006). "A Voter Rebuke For Bush, the War And the Right". Washington Post. Retrieved May 26, 2010. Bush and senior adviser Karl Rove tried to replicate that strategy this fall, hoping to keep the election from becoming a referendum on the president's leadership.
  31. ^ "Election '98 Lewinsky factor never materialized". CNN. November 4, 1998. Americans shunned the opportunity to turn Tuesday's midterm elections into a referendum on President Bill Clinton's behavior, dashing Republican hopes of gaining seats in the House and Senate.
  32. ^ See Anthony Gierzynski, Saving American Elections: A Diagnosis and Prescription for a Healthier Democracy (Cambria Press, 2011)
  33. ^ See Anthony Gierzynski, Saving American Elections: A Diagnosis and Prescription for a Healthier Democracy (Cambria Press, 2011)
  34. ^ Cohen, Jeff. "US Elections". USElections.com. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
  35. ^ "2016 Presidential Election Interactive Map". 270toWin.com. Retrieved December 11, 2016.
  36. ^ Gibson, Brittany (May 28, 2020). "The Many Varieties of Voter Suppression". The American Prospect. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  37. ^ Stanton, Zack (September 26, 2021), "What If 2020 Was Just a Rehearsal?", Politico
  38. ^ a b c d Parlapiano, Alicia (October 29, 2020), "The Upshot: How Long Will Vote Counting Take? Estimates and Deadlines in All 50 States", The New York Times, retrieved October 29, 2020.
  39. ^ Gilens, Martin; Page, Benjamin I. (September 1, 2014). "Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens". Perspectives on Politics. 12 (3): 564–581. doi:10.1017/S1537592714001595. ISSN 1541-0986.
  40. ^ "Foreign Governments Have Been Tampering With U.S. Elections for Decades". Politico.com. Retrieved October 14, 2017.
  41. ^ "Why the Electoral College is the absolute worst, explained". Vox.com. November 7, 2016. Retrieved October 14, 2017.
  42. ^ Bump, Philip (October 13, 2014). "The disconnect between voter ID laws and voter fraud". The Fix. The Washington Post. Retrieved July 26, 2016.
  43. ^ Dale Baum and James L. Hailey (Autumn 1994). "Lyndon Johnson's Victory in the 1948 Texas Senate Race: A Reappraisal". Political Science Quarterly. 109 (4): 595–613. doi:10.2307/2151840. JSTOR 2151840.
  44. ^ "Key witness testifies to tampering with absentee ballots in N.C, House race". NBC News. February 18, 2019. Retrieved February 21, 2019. Britt said some of the ballots she collected were unsealed and uncompleted and testified she filled out the options left blank for Republican candidates — an admission of vote tampering that violates North Carolina law.
  45. ^ Sanford Levinson. "The Democratic Deficit in America".
  46. ^ Sanford Levinson (LA Times article available on website) (October 16, 2006). . University of Texas School of Law -- News & Events. Archived from the original on October 5, 2009. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  47. ^ McDonough, Bryanne (November 4, 2016). "Our Elections Are Stupid: How to Make Them Less Dumb". Reporter. Retrieved October 21, 2022.
  48. ^ Learning, Lumen (February 21, 2019). "The Two-Party System". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

External links

  • Official website
  • FairVote.org
  • Long Distance Voter - Non-partisan resource for registering to vote or getting an absentee ballot.(site not found)*needs updated link
  • U.S. Election Statistics: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • A New Nation Votes: American Electoral Returns, 1788-1825, American Antiquarian Society, OCLC 176880038 – via Tufts University

elections, united, states, most, recent, elections, 2022, united, states, elections, politics, united, states, elections, held, government, officials, federal, state, local, levels, federal, level, nation, head, state, president, elected, indirectly, people, e. For the most recent elections see 2022 United States elections In the politics of the United States elections are held for government officials at the federal state and local levels At the federal level the nation s head of state the president is elected indirectly by the people of each state through an Electoral College Today these electors almost always vote with the popular vote of their state All members of the federal legislature the Congress are directly elected by the people of each state There are many elected offices at state level each state having at least an elective governor and legislature There are also elected offices at the local level in counties cities towns townships boroughs and villages as well as for special districts and school districts which may transcend county and municipal boundaries An 1846 painting by George Caleb Bingham showing a polling judge administering an oath to a voter The country s election system is highly decentralized 1 While the U S Constitution does set parameters for the election of federal officials state law not federal regulates most aspects of elections in the U S including primary elections the eligibility of voters beyond the basic constitutional definition the running of each state s electoral college as well as the running of state and local elections All elections federal state and local are administered by the individual states 2 with many aspects of the system s operations delegated to the county or local level 1 Under federal law the general elections of the president and Congress occur on Election Day the Tuesday after the first Monday of November These federal general elections are held in even numbered years with presidential elections occurring every four years and congressional elections occurring every two years The general elections that are held two years after the presidential ones are referred to as the midterm elections General elections for state and local offices are held at the discretion of the individual state and local governments with many of these races coinciding with either presidential or midterm elections as a matter of convenience and cost saving while other state and local races may occur during odd numbered off years The date when primary elections for federal state and local races occur are also at the discretion of the individual state and local governments presidential primaries in particular have historically been staggered between the states beginning sometime in January or February and ending about mid June before the November general election The restriction and extension of voting rights to different groups has been a contested process throughout United States history The federal government has also been involved in attempts to increase voter turnout by measures such as the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 The financing of elections has also long been controversial because private sources make up substantial amounts of campaign contributions especially in federal elections Voluntary public funding for candidates willing to accept spending limits was introduced in 1974 for presidential primaries and elections The Federal Elections Commission created in 1975 by an amendment to the Federal Election Campaign Act has the responsibility to disclose campaign finance information to enforce the provisions of the law such as the limits and prohibitions on contributions and to oversee the public funding of U S presidential elections Contents 1 Voting 1 1 Voting methods 1 2 Eligibility 1 3 Voter registration 1 4 Voter ID Laws 1 5 Absentee and mail voting 1 6 Early voting 1 7 Voting equipment 2 Levels of election 2 1 Federal elections 2 1 1 Presidential elections 2 1 2 Congressional elections 2 1 2 1 Senate elections 2 1 2 2 House of Representatives elections 2 2 State elections 2 3 Local elections 2 4 Tribal elections 3 Comparison of recent and upcoming election years 4 Features of the election system 4 1 Multiple levels of regulation 4 2 Party systems 4 3 Ballot access 4 4 Campaign finance 4 5 Primaries and caucuses 5 Election information on the web 6 Criticisms 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksVoting EditVoting methods Edit Voting systems used in each state First past the post FPTP Two round system TRS Instant runoff voting IRV Louisiana primary Nonpartisan blanket primary and top two runoff general Nonpartisan blanket primary and top four instant runoff general The most common method used in U S elections is the first past the post system where the highest polling candidate wins the election 3 Under this system a candidate only requires a plurality of votes to win rather than an outright majority Some may use a two round system where if no candidate receives a required number of votes usually but not always a majority then there is a runoff between the two candidates with the most votes citation needed Since 2002 several cities have adopted instant runoff voting in their elections Voters rank the candidates in order of preference rather than voting for a single candidate If a candidate secures more than half of votes cast that candidate wins Otherwise the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated Ballots assigned to the eliminated candidate are recounted and assigned to those of the remaining candidates who rank next in order of preference on each ballot This process continues until one candidate wins by obtaining more than half the votes citation needed In 2016 Maine became the first state to adopt instant runoff voting known in the state as ranked choice voting statewide for its elections although due to state constitutional provisions the system is only used for federal elections and state primaries Eligibility Edit Main article Voting rights in the United States The eligibility of an individual for voting is set out in the constitution and also regulated at state level The constitution states that suffrage cannot be denied on grounds of race or color sex or age for citizens eighteen years or older Beyond these basic qualifications it is the responsibility of state legislatures to regulate voter eligibility Some states ban convicted criminals especially felons from voting for a fixed period of time or indefinitely 4 The number of American adults who are currently or permanently ineligible to vote due to felony convictions is estimated to be 5 3 million 5 Some states also have legacy constitutional statements barring those legally declared incompetent from voting such references are generally considered obsolete and are being considered for review or removal where they appear 6 About 4 3 million American citizens that reside in Washington D C Puerto Rico and other U S territories do not have the same level of federal representation as those that reside in the 50 U S states These areas only have non voting members in the U S House of Representatives and no representation in the U S Senate Citizens in the U S territories are also not represented in the Electoral College and therefore cannot vote for the president 7 Those in the Washington D C are permitted to vote for the president because of the Twenty third Amendment Voter registration Edit Main article Voter registration in the United States While the federal government has jurisdiction over federal elections most election laws are decided at the state level All U S states except North Dakota require that citizens who wish to vote be registered In many states voter registration takes place at the county or municipal level Traditionally voters had to register directly at state or local offices to vote but in the mid 1990s efforts were made by the federal government to make registering easier in an attempt to increase turnout The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 the Motor Voter law required state governments that receive certain types of federal funding to make the voter registration process easier by providing uniform registration services through drivers license registration centers disability centers schools libraries and mail in registration Other states allow citizens same day registration on Election Day An estimated 50 million Americans are unregistered It has been reported that registering to vote poses greater obstacles for low income citizens racial minorities and linguistic minorities Native Americans and persons with disabilities International election observers have called on authorities in the U S to implement measures to remediate the high number of unregistered citizens 8 In many states citizens registering to vote may declare an affiliation with a political party 9 This declaration of affiliation does not cost money and does not make the citizen a dues paying member of a party A party cannot prevent a voter from declaring his or her affiliation with them but it can refuse requests for full membership In some states only voters affiliated with a party may vote in that party s primary elections see below Declaring a party affiliation is never required Some states including Georgia Michigan Minnesota Virginia Wisconsin and Washington practice non partisan registration 10 Voter ID Laws Edit Main article Voter identification laws in the United States Voter ID laws by state as of April 2022 update Photo ID required Strict Photo ID requested Non strict Non photo ID required Strict Non photo ID requested Non strict No ID required to vote Voter ID laws in the United States are laws that require a person to provide some form of official identification before they are permitted to register to vote receive a ballot for an election or to actually vote in elections in the United States Proponents of voter ID laws argue that they reduce electoral fraud while placing only little burden on voters Absentee and mail voting Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Sorting vote by mail envelopes San Jose Santa Clara County California 2018 Main article Postal voting in the United States Voters unable or unwilling to vote at polling stations on Election Day may vote via absentee ballots depending on state law Originally these ballots were for people who could not go to the polling place on election day Now some states let them be used for convenience but state laws still call them absentee ballots 11 Absentee ballots can be sent and returned by mail or requested and submitted in person or dropped off in locked boxes About half the states and territories allow no excuse absentee where no reason is required to request an absentee ballot others require a valid reason such as infirmity or travel 11 Some states let voters with permanent disabilities apply for permanent absentee voter status and some other states let all citizens apply for permanent status so they will automatically receive an absentee ballot for each election 12 Otherwise a voter must request an absentee ballot before the election occurs In Colorado Hawaii Oregon Utah and Washington state all ballots are delivered through the mail in many other states there are counties or certain small elections where everyone votes by mail 11 13 As of July 2020 26 states allow designated agents to collect and submit ballots on behalf of another voter whose identities are specified on a signed application Usually such agents are family members or persons from the same residence 13 states neither enable nor prohibit ballot collection as a matter of law Among those that allow it 12 have limits on how many ballots an agent may collect Americans living outside the United States including active duty members of the armed forces stationed outside of their state of residency may register and vote under the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act UOCAVA Almost half the states require these ballots to be returned by mail Other states allow mail along with some combination of fax or email four states allow a web portal 14 A significant measure to prevent some types of fraud has been to require the voter s signature on the outer envelope which is compared to one or more signatures on file before taking the ballot out of the envelope and counting it 15 Not all states have standards for signature review 16 There have been concerns that signatures are improperly rejected from young and minority voters at higher rates than others with no or limited ability of voters to appeal the rejection 17 18 For other types of errors experts estimate that while there is more fraud with absentee ballots than in person voting it has affected only a few local elections 19 20 Following the 2020 United States presidential election amidst disputes of its outcome as a rationale behind litigation demanding a halt to official vote counting in some areas allegations were made that vote counting is offshored Former Trump Administration official Chris Krebs head of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA during the election said in a December 2020 interview that All votes in the United States of America are counted in the United States of America 21 One documented trend is that in person votes and early votes are more likely to lean to the Republican Party while the provisional ballots which are counted later trend to the Democratic Party This phenomenon is known as blue shift and has led to situations where Republicans won on election night only to be overtaken by Democrats after all votes were counted 22 Foley did not find that mail in or absentee votes favored either party 23 Early voting Edit Main article Early voting United States Early voting is a formal process where voters can cast their ballots prior to the official Election Day Early voting in person is allowed in 33 states and in Washington D C with no excuse required 24 Voting equipment Edit Further information Electronic voting in the United States and Voting machine Prevalence of voting technology in the US in 1980 and 2008 25 Voting technology 1980 prevalence 2008 prevalenceHand counted paper ballot 10 lt 1 Lever machine 40 6 Punch card 33 negligibleOptical scan 2 60 DRE lt 1 33 38 The earliest voting in the US was through paper ballots that were hand counted By the late 1800s paper ballots printed by election officials were nearly universal By 1980 10 of American voters used paper ballots that were counted by hand which dropped below 1 by 2008 25 Mechanical voting machines were first used in the US in the 1892 elections in Lockport New York The state of Massachusetts was one of the first states to adopt lever voting machines doing so in 1899 but the state s Supreme Judicial Court ruled their usage unconstitutional in 1907 Lever machines grew in popularity despite controversies with about two thirds of votes for president in the 1964 United States presidential election cast with lever machines Lever machine use declined to about 40 of votes in 1980 then 6 in 2008 Punch card voting equipment was developed in the 1960s with about one third of votes cast with punch cards in 1980 New York was the last state to phase out lever voting in response to the 2000 Help America Vote Act HAVA which allocated funds for the replacement of lever machine and punch card voting equipment New York replaced its lever voting with optical scanning in 2010 25 In the 1960s technology was developed that enabled paper ballots filled with pencil or ink to be optically scanned rather than hand counted In 1980 about 2 of votes used optical scanning this increased to 30 by 2000 and 60 by 2008 In the 1970s the final major voting technology for the US was developed the DRE voting machine In 1980 less than 1 of ballots were cast with DRE Prevalence grew to 10 in 2000 then peaked at 38 in 2006 Because DREs are fully digital with no paper trail of votes backlash against them caused prevalence to drop to 33 in 2010 25 The voting equipment used by a given US county is related to the county s historical wealth A county s use of punch cards in the year 2000 was positively correlated with the county s wealth in 1969 when punch card machines were at their peak of popularity Counties with higher wealth in 1989 were less likely to still use punch cards in 2000 This supports the idea that punch cards were used in counties that were well off in the 1960s but whose wealth declined in the proceeding decades Counties that maintained their wealth from the 1960s onwards could afford to replace punch card machines as they fell out of favor 25 Levels of election EditFederal elections Edit See also Election Day United States This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Voters cast ballots for the 2020 elections at Roosevelt High School in Des Moines Iowa The United States has a presidential system of government which means that the executive and legislature are elected separately Article II of the United States Constitution requires that the election of the U S president by the Electoral College must occur on a single day throughout the country Article I established that elections for Congressional offices however can be held at different times Congressional and presidential elections take place simultaneously every four years and the intervening Congressional elections which take place every two years are called midterm elections The constitution states that members of the United States House of Representatives must be at least 25 years old a citizen of the United States for at least seven years and be a legal inhabitant of the state they represent Senators must be at least 30 years old a citizen of the United States for at least nine years and be a legal inhabitant of the state they represent The president and vice president must be at least 35 years old a natural born citizen of the United States and a resident in the United States for at least fourteen years It is the responsibility of state legislatures to regulate the qualifications for a candidate appearing on a ballot paper although in order to get onto the ballot a candidate must often collect a legally defined number of signatures Presidential elections Edit Main articles United States presidential election and Electoral College United States The president and the vice president are elected together in a presidential election 26 It is an indirect election with the winner being determined by votes cast by electors of the Electoral College In modern times voters in each state select a slate of electors from a list of several slates designated by different parties or candidates and the electors typically promise in advance to vote for the candidates of their party whose names of the presidential candidates usually appear on the ballot rather than those of the individual electors The winner of the election is the candidate with at least 270 Electoral College votes It is possible for a candidate to win the electoral vote and lose the nationwide popular vote receive fewer votes nationwide than the second ranked candidate Prior to ratification of the Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution 1804 the runner up in a presidential election 27 became the vice president Electoral College votes are cast by individual states by a group of electors each elector casts one electoral college vote Until the Twenty third Amendment to the United States Constitution of 1961 citizens from the District of Columbia did not have representation and or electors in the electoral college In modern times with electors usually committed to vote for a party candidate in advance electors that vote against the popular vote in their state are called faithless electors and occurrences are rare State law regulates how states cast their electoral college votes In all states except Maine and Nebraska the candidate that wins the most votes in the state receives all its electoral college votes a winner takes all system From 1969 in Maine and from 1991 in Nebraska two electoral votes are awarded based on the winner of the statewide election and the rest two in Maine three in Nebraska go to the highest vote winner in each of the state s congressional districts Congressional elections Edit Congress has two chambers the Senate and the House of Representatives Senate elections Edit The Senate has 100 members elected for a six year term in dual seat constituencies 2 from each state with one third being renewed every two years The group of the Senate seats that is up for election during a given year is known as a class the three classes are staggered so that only one of the three groups is renewed every two years Until the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913 states chose how to elect Senators and they were often elected by state legislatures not the electorate of states House of Representatives elections Edit A chart of party balance in the House from 1789 to 2004 The House of Representatives has 435 members elected for a two year term in single seat constituencies House of Representatives elections are held every two years on the first Tuesday after November 1 in even years Special House elections can occur between if a member dies or resigns during a term House elections are first past the post elections that elect a Representative from each of 435 House districts that cover the United States The non voting delegates of Washington D C and the territories of American Samoa Guam the Northern Mariana Islands Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands are also elected House elections occur every two years correlated with presidential elections or halfway through a president s term The House delegate of Puerto Rico officially known as the resident commissioner of Puerto Rico is elected to a four year term coinciding with those of the President As the redistricting commissions of states are often partisan districts are often drawn which benefit incumbents An increasing trend has been for incumbents to have an overwhelming advantage in House elections and since the 1994 election an unusually low number of seats has changed hands in each election citation needed Due to gerrymandering fewer than 10 of all House seats are contested in each election cycle Over 90 of House members are reelected every two years due to lack of electoral competition Gerrymandering of the House combined with the general deficiencies of the first past the post voting system and divisions inherent in the design of the Senate and of the Electoral College result in a discrepancy between the percentage of popular support for various political parties and the actual level of the parties representation In particular gerrymandering has been found to benefit the Republican Party more than it does the Democratic Party 28 State elections Edit State law and state constitutions controlled by state legislatures regulate elections at state level and local level Various officials at state level are elected Since the separation of powers applies to states as well as the federal government state legislatures and the executive the governor are elected separately Governors and lieutenant governors are elected in all states in some states on a joint ticket and in some states separately some separately in different electoral cycles The governors of the territories of American Samoa Guam the Northern Mariana Islands Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands are also elected In some states executive positions such as Attorney General and Secretary of State are also elected offices All members of state legislatures and territorial jurisdiction legislatures are elected In some states members of the state supreme court and other members of the state judiciary are elected Proposals to amend the state constitution are also placed on the ballot in some states As a matter of convenience and cost saving elections for many of these state and local offices are held at the same time as either the federal presidential or midterm elections There are a handful of states however that instead hold their elections during odd numbered off years Local elections Edit At the local level county and city government positions are usually filled by election especially within the legislative branch The extent to which offices in the executive or judicial branches are elected vary from county to county or city to city Some examples of local elected positions include sheriffs at the county level and mayors and school board members at the city level Like state elections an election for a specific local office may be held at the same time as either the presidential midterm or off year elections Tribal elections Edit Many Native American tribal governmental positions including executive and legislative positions are typically filled by election In some cases tribal citizens elect council members who elect from among their body a chief executive The number of positions and titles used vary from one tribal government to another but common titles for the tribal government s chief executive terms include president governor principal chief chair and chief These elections may be held in conjunction with federal state or local elections but are often held independently under the authority of the tribe s office of elections Comparison of recent and upcoming election years EditSee also List of elections in the United States Basic rotation of U S general elections fixed terms only 1 Year 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026Type Midterm Off yeara Presidential year Off yearb MidtermPresident No Yes NoSenate Class III 34 seats No Class I 33 seats No Class II 33 seats House All 435 seats 3 No All 435 seats 2 No All 435 seats 2 Governor 36 states DC amp 3 territories 4 AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT FL GA HI ID IL IA KS ME MD MA MI MN NE NV NH NM NY OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX VT WI WY DC Mayor GU MP VI 3 states KY LA MS 11 states 2 territories DE IN MO MT NH NC ND UT VT WA WV AS PR 2 states NJ VA 36 states DC amp 3 territories 4 AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT FL GA HI ID IL IA KS ME MD MA MI MN NE NV NH NM NY OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX VT WI WY DC Mayor GU MP VILieutenant Governor 5 10 states 6 AL AR CA GA ID NV OK RI TX VT 2 states LA MS 5 states 1 territory DE MO NC VT WA AS 1 state VA 10 states 6 AL AR CA GA ID NV OK RI TX VTSecretary of State 26 states AL AZ AR CA CO CT GA ID IL IN IA KS MA MI MN NE NV NM ND OH RI SC TX VT WI WY 2 statesKY MS 8 states MO MT NC OR PA VT WA WV None 26 states AL AZ AR CA CO CT GA ID IL IN IA KS MA MI MN NE NV NM ND OH RI SC TX VT WI WYAttorney General 29 states DC amp 2 territories AL AZ AR CA CO CT FL GA ID IL IA KS MD MA MI MN NE NV NM NY ND OH OK RI SC TX VT WI WY DC GU MP 2 states KY MS 10 states IN MO MT NC OR PA UT VT WA WV 1 state VA 29 states DC amp 2 territories AL AZ AR CA CO CT FL GA ID IL IA KS MD MA MI MN NE NV NM NY ND OH OK RI SC TX VT WI WY DC GU MPState Treasurer 7 23 states AL AZ AR CA CO CT FL CFO ID IL IN IA KS MA NE NV NM OH OK RI SC VT WI WY 2 states KY MS 9 states MO NC ND OR PA UT VT WA WV None 23 states AL AZ AR CA CO CT FL CFO ID IL IN IA KS MA NE NV NM OH OK RI SC VT WI WYState Comptroller Controller 8 states CA CT IL MD NV NY SC TX None None None 8 states CA CT IL MD NV NY SC TXState Auditor 15 states AL AR DE IN IA MA MN MO NE NM OH OK SD VT WY 1 state KY 9 states MT NC ND PA UT VT WA WV GU None 15 states AL AR DE IN IA MA MN MO NE NM OH OK SD VT WYSuperintendent of Public Instruction 8 states AZ CA GA ID OK SC SD incl Land WY None 4 states MT NC ND WA 1 state WI 8 states AZ CA GA ID OK SC SD incl Land WYAgriculture Commissioner 7 statesAL FL GA IA ND SC TX 2 statesKY MS 2 statesNC WV None 7 statesAL FL GA IA ND SC TXInsurance Commissioner 5 statesDE CA GA KS OK 2 statesLA MS 3 statesNC ND WA None 5 statesDE CA GA KS OK Other commissioners amp elected officials 8 statesAZ Mine Inspector AR Land GA Land NM Land ND Tax OK Labor OR Labor TX Land None 1 stateNC Labor None 8 statesAZ Mine Inspector AR Land GA Land NM Land ND Tax OK Labor OR Labor TX Land State legislatures 8 46 states DC amp 4 territories AK AL AZ AR CA CO CT DE FL GA HI ID IL IN IO KS KY ME MA MD MI MN MO MN NE NV NH NM NY NC ND OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT WA WV WI WY DC AS GU MP VI 4 states LA MS NJ VA 44 states DC amp 5 territories AK AZ AR CA CO CT DE FL GA HI ID IL IN IO KS KY ME MA MI MN MO MN NE NV NH NM NY NC ND OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT WA WV WI WY DC AS GU MP PR VI 2 states VA NJ 46 states DC amp 4 territories AK AL AZ AR CA CO CT DE FL GA HI ID IL IN IO KS KY ME MA MD MI MN MO MN NE NV NH NM NY NC ND OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT WA WV WI WY DC AS GU MP VIState boards of education 9 8 states DC amp 3 territories AL CO KS MI NE OH TX UT DC GU MP VI None 8 states DC amp 3 territories AL CO KS MI NE OH TX UT DC GU MP VI None 8 states DC amp 3 territories AL CO KS MI NE OH TX UT DC GU MP VIOther state local and tribal offices Varies1 This table does not include special elections which may be held to fill political offices that have become vacant between the regularly scheduled elections 2 As well as all six non voting delegates of the U S House 3 As well as five non voting delegates of the U S House The Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico instead serves a four year term that coincides with the presidential term 4 The Governors of New Hampshire and Vermont are each elected to two year terms The other 48 state governors and all five territorial governors serve four year terms 5 In 26 states and 3 territories the Lieutenant Governor is elected on the same ticket as the Governor AK CO CT FL HI IL IN IA KS KY MD MA MI MN MT NE NJ NM NY ND OH PA SC SD UT WI GU MP VI 6 Like the Governor Vermont s other officials are each elected to two year terms All other state officers for all other states listed serve four year terms 7 In some states the comptroller or controller has the duties equivalent to a treasurer There are some states with both positions so both have been included separately 8 This list does not differentiate chambers of each legislature Forty nine state legislatures are bicameral Nebraska is unicameral Additionally Washington DC Guam and the US Virgin Islands are unicameral the other territories are bicameral All legislatures have varying terms for their members Many have two year terms for the lower house and four year terms for the upper house Some have all two year terms and some all four year terms Arkansas has a combination of both two and four year terms in the same chamber 9 Most states not listed here have a board appointed by the Governor and legislature All boards listed here have members that serve four year staggered terms except Colorado which has six year terms and Guam which has two year terms Most are elected statewide some are elected from districts Louisiana Ohio Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands have additional members who are appointed viewtalkeditFeatures of the election system EditMultiple levels of regulation Edit In the US elections are actually conducted by local authorities working under local state and federal law and regulation as well as the US Constitution It is a highly decentralized system 1 In around half of US states the secretary of state is the official in charge of elections in other states it is someone appointed for the job or a commission 1 It is this person or commission who is responsible for certifying tabulating and reporting votes for the state 1 Party systems Edit Main articles Party system and Politics of the United States Americans vote for a specific candidate instead of directly selecting a particular political party The United States Constitution has never formally addressed the issue of political parties The Founding Fathers such as Alexander Hamilton and James Madison did not support domestic political factions at the time the Constitution was written 29 In addition the first president of the United States George Washington was not a member of any political party at the time of his election or throughout his tenure as president Furthermore he hoped that political parties would not be formed fearing conflict and stagnation Nevertheless the beginnings of the American two party system emerged from his immediate circle of advisers with Hamilton and Madison ending up being the core leaders in this emerging party system Due to Duverger s law the two party system continued following the creation of political parties as the first past the post electoral system was kept Candidates decide to run under a party label register to run pay filing fees etc In the primary elections the party organization stays neutral until one candidate has been elected The platform of the party is written by the winning candidate in presidential elections in other elections no platform is involved Candidates formally manage the campaign and fund raising organization independent of the party The primary elections in the main parties are organized by the states who also register the party affiliation of the voters this also makes it easier to gerrymander the congressional districts The party is thus little more than a campaign organization for the main elections However elections in the United States often do become de facto national races between the political parties In what is known as presidential coattails candidates in presidential elections usually bring out supporters who then vote for his or her party s candidates for other offices usually resulting in the presidential winner s party gaining seats in Congress On the other hand midterm elections are sometimes regarded as a referendum on the sitting president s and or incumbent party s performance 30 31 Ballot access Edit Main article Ballot access Ballot access refers to the laws which regulate under what conditions access is granted for a candidate or political party to appear on voters ballots Each state has its own ballot access laws to determine who may appear on ballots and who may not According to Article I Section 4 of the United States Constitution the authority to regulate the time place and manner of federal elections is up to each State unless Congress legislates otherwise Depending on the office and the state it may be possible for a voter to cast a write in vote for a candidate whose name does not appear on the ballot but it is extremely rare for such a candidate to win office Campaign finance Edit Main article Campaign finance in the United States The funding of electoral campaigns has always been a controversial issue in American politics Infringement of free speech First Amendment is an argument against restrictions on campaign contributions while allegations of corruption arising from unlimited contributions and the need for political equality are arguments for the other side 32 Private funds are a major source of finance from individuals and organizations The first attempt to regulate campaign finance by legislation was in 1867 but major legislation with the intention to widely enforce on campaign finance was not introduced until the 1970s Money contributed to campaigns can be classified into hard money and soft money Hard money is money contributed directly to a campaign by an individual or organization Soft money is money from an individual or organization not contributed to a campaign but spent in candidate specific advertising or other efforts that benefits that candidate by groups supporting the candidate but legally not coordinated by the official campaign The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 required candidates to disclose sources of campaign contributions and campaign expenditure It was amended in 1974 to legally limit campaign contributions It banned direct contributing to campaigns by corporations and trade unions and limited individual donations to 1 000 per campaign It introduced public funding for presidential primaries and elections The Act also placed limits of 5 000 per campaign on PACs political action committees The limits on individual contributions and prohibition of direct corporate or labor union campaigns led to a huge increase in the number of PACs Today many labor unions and corporations have their own PACs and over 4 000 in total exist The 1974 amendment also specified a Federal Election Commission created in 1975 to administer and enforce campaign finance law Various other provisions were also included such as a ban on contributions or expenditures by foreign nationals incorporated from the Foreign Agents Registration Act FARA 1966 The case of Buckley v Valeo 1976 challenged the Act Most provisions were upheld but the court found that the mandatory spending limit imposed was unconstitutional as was the limit placed on campaign spending from the candidate s personal fortune and the provision that limited independent expenditures by individuals and organizations supporting but not officially linked to a campaign The effect of the first decision was to allow candidates such as Ross Perot and Steve Forbes to spend enormous amounts of their own money in their own campaigns The effect of the second decision was to allow the culture of soft money to develop A 1979 amendment to the Federal Election Campaign Act allowed political parties to spend without limit on get out the vote and voter registration activities conducted primarily for a presidential candidate Later they were permitted by FECA to use soft money unregulated unlimited contributions to fund this effort Increasingly the money began to be spent on issue advertising candidate specific advertising that was being funded mostly by soft money The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 banned local and national parties from spending soft money and banned national party committees from accepting or spending soft money It increased the limit of contributions by individuals from 1 000 to 2 000 It banned corporations or labor unions from funding issue advertising directly and banned the use of corporate or labor money for advertisements that mention a federal candidate within 60 days of a general election or 30 days of a primary The constitutionality of the bill was challenged and in December 2003 the Supreme Court upheld most provisions of the legislation See McConnell v FEC A large number of 527 groups were active for the first time in the 2004 election These groups receive donations from individuals and groups and then spend the money on issue advocacy such as the anti Kerry ads by Swift Boat Veterans for Truth This is a new form of soft money and not surprisingly it is controversial Many 527 groups have close links with the Democratic or Republican parties even though legally they cannot coordinate their activities with them John McCain one of the senators behind the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act and President Bush have both declared a desire to ban 527s Changing campaign finance laws is a highly controversial issue Some reformers wish to see laws changed in order to improve electoral competition and political equality Opponents wish to see the system stay as it is whereas other reformers wish even fewer restrictions on the freedom to spend and contribute money The Supreme Court has made it increasingly difficult for those who wish to regulate election financing but options like partial public funding of campaigns are still possible and offer the potential to address reformers concerns with minimal restrictions on the freedom to contribute 33 Primaries and caucuses Edit Main articles Primary elections in the United States and Caucus In partisan elections candidates are chosen by primary elections abbreviated to primaries and caucuses in the states the District of Columbia Puerto Rico American Samoa Guam and the U S Virgin Islands A primary election is an election in which registered voters in a jurisdiction nominating primary select a political party s candidate for a later election There are various types of primary either the whole electorate is eligible and voters choose one party s primary at the polling booth an open primary or only independent voters can choose a party s primary at the polling booth a semi closed primary or only registered members of the party are allowed to vote closed primary The blanket primary when voters could vote for all parties primaries on the same ballot was struck down by the United States Supreme Court as violating the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of assembly in the case California Democratic Party v Jones Primaries are also used to select candidates at the state level for example in gubernatorial elections Caucuses also nominate candidates by election but they are very different from primaries Caucuses are meetings that occur at precincts and involve discussion of each party s platform and issues such as voter turnout in addition to voting Eleven states Iowa New Mexico North Dakota Maine Nevada Hawaii Minnesota Kansas Alaska Wyoming Colorado and the District of Columbia use caucuses for one or more political parties The primary and caucus season in presidential elections lasts from the Iowa caucus in January to the last primaries in June Front loading when larger numbers of contests take place in the opening weeks of the season can have an effect on the nomination process potentially reducing the number of realistic candidates as fund raisers and donors quickly abandon those they see as untenable However it is not the case that the successful candidate is always the candidate that does the best in the early primaries There is also a period dubbed the invisible primary that takes place before the primary season when candidates attempt to solicit media coverage and funding well before the real primary season begins A state s presidential primary election or caucus usually is an indirect election instead of voters directly selecting a particular person running for president it determines how many delegates each party s national political convention will receive from their respective state These delegates then in turn select their party s presidential nominee Held in the summer a political convention s purpose is also to adopt a statement of the party s principles and goals known as the platform and adopt the rules for the party s activities The day on which primaries are held for congressional seats and state and local offices may also vary between states The only federally mandated day for elections is Election Day for the general elections of the president and Congress all other elections are at the discretion of the individual state and local governments Election information on the web EditIn most states of the U S the chief election officer is the secretary of state In some states local officials like a county registrar of voters or supervisor of elections manages the conduct of elections under the supervision of or in coordination with the chief election officer of the state Many of these state and county offices have web sites that provide information to help voters obtain information on their polling places for each election the various districts to which they belong e g House and Senate districts in the state and federal legislature school boards water districts municipalities etc as well as dates of elections and deadlines to file to run or register to vote Some allow voters to download a sample ballot in advance of the election Beyond this various media outlets provide information they think will interest their audience More systematic coverage is provided by web sites devoted specifically to collecting election information and making it available to the public Two of the better known such sites are Ballotpedia and Vote Smart These are run by non profit non partisan organizations They have paid staffs and are much more tightly controlled than Wikipedia USElections com 34 tries to provide similar information but relies on volunteers in a way that is more like Wikipedia than Ballotpedia and Vote Smart The website 270towin provides actual electoral college maps both current and historic but also the ability to use an interactive map in order to make election predictions Ongoing election news is reported as well as data on Senate and House races 35 OpenSecrets provides election information focusing on campaign finance Criticisms EditSee also Voter suppression in the United States Gerrymandering in the United States and Sexism in American political elections Voting laws and procedures between the states vary as a consequence of the decentralized system including those pertaining to provisional ballots postal voting voter IDs voter registration voting machines and vote counting felony disenfranchisement and election recounts Thus the voting rights or voter suppression in one state may be stricter or more lenient than another state 36 More recently following the 2020 US presidential election decentralized administration and inconsistent state voting laws and processes have shown themselves to be targets for voter subversion schemes enabled by appointing politically motivated actors to election administration roles with degrees of freedom to subvert the will of the people One such scheme would allow these officials to appoint a slate of alternate electors to skew operations of the electoral college in favor of a minority party 37 As detailed in a state by state breakdown 38 the United States has a long standing tradition of publicly announcing the incomplete unofficial vote counts on election night the late evening of election day and declaring unofficial projected winners despite that many of the mail in and absentee votes have not been counted yet 38 In some states in fact none of them have yet been counted by that time 38 This tradition was based on the assumption that the incomplete unofficial count on election night is probably going to match the official count which is officially finished and certified several weeks later An intrinsic weakness of this assumption and of the tradition of premature announcements based on it is that the public is likely to misapprehend that these particular projected winning candidates have certainly won before any official vote count has been completed whereas in fact all that is truly known is that those candidates have some degree of likelihood of having won the magnitude of the likelihood all the way from very reliable to not reliable at all varies by state because the details of election procedures vary by state 38 This problem affects all non in person votes even those cast weeks before election day not just late arriving ones In 2014 scientists from Princeton University did a study on the influence of the so called elite and their derived power from special interest lobbying versus the ordinary US citizen within the US political system They found that the US was looking more like an oligarchy than a real representative democracy thus eroding a government of the people by the people for the people as stated by Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg Address In fact the study found that average citizens had an almost nonexistent influence on public policies and that the ordinary citizen had little or no independent influence on policy at all 39 Attempts by foreign countries to influence the outcome have occurred in some elections 40 The Electoral College has been criticized by some people for being un democratic it can choose a candidate who did not win the popular vote and for encouraging campaigns to only focus on swing states 41 Allegations of voter impersonation of which there are only 31 documented cases in the United States from the 2000 2014 period have led to calls for Voter ID laws in the United States 42 Notable instances of allegations of stolen elections and election fraud include the 1948 United States Senate election in Texas in which 202 patently fraudulent 43 608 ballots gave future President Lyndon Johnson a seat in the US Senate and the 2018 North Carolina 9th congressional district election in which ballot tampering was admitted in witness testimony including filling in blank votes to favor Republican candidates 44 Sanford Levinson argues that next to the fact that campaign financing and gerrymandering are seen as serious problems for democracy also one of the root causes of the American democratic deficit lies in the United States Constitution itself 45 for example there is a lack of proportional representation in the Senate for highly populated states such as California 46 The first past the post system has also been criticized for creating a de facto pure two party system as postulated in Duverger s law that suppresses voices that do not hold views consistent with the largest faction in a particular party as well as limiting voters choices in elections 47 48 See also EditEthnocultural politics in the United States Contested elections in American history Outline of American politics Bio index model Election Day in the United States 2023 national electoral calendar Election Assistance Commission Electoral system Electronic voting by country United States List of elections in the United StatesReferences Edit a b c d e Election Administration at State and Local Levels National Conference of State Legislatures June 15 2016 Elections amp Voting whitehouse gov April 2 2015 Retrieved October 14 2017 via National Archives Dunleavy Patrick Diwakar Rekha 2013 Analysing multiparty competition in plurality rule elections PDF Party Politics 19 6 855 886 doi 10 1177 1354068811411026 S2CID 18840573 Gonchar Michael February 18 2014 Should Felons Be Allowed to Vote After They Have Served Their Time Learning blogs nytimes com Retrieved October 14 2017 Felony Disenfranchisement in the United States PDF The Sentencing Project Archived from the original PDF on July 31 2009 Retrieved 2007 01 10 DeFalco Beth January 9 2007 New Jersey to take idiots insane out of state constitution Delaware News Journal Organization for Security and Co Operation in Europe Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights ODIHR ODIHR Limited Election Observation Mission Final Report VIII Voting Rights p 13 Organization for Security and Co Operation in Europe Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights ODIHR ODIHR Limited Election Observation Mission Final Report IX Voter Registration p 12 13 Home League of Women Voters www lwv org Archived from the original on October 5 2006 Voter Registration Resources Project Vote Smart Archived from the original on October 30 2011 Retrieved 30 October 2011 a b c Voting Outside the Polling Place Absentee All Mail and other Voting at Home Options www ncsl org Retrieved July 2 2020 VOPP Table 3 States With Permanent Absentee Voting www ncsl org Retrieved July 2 2020 VOPP Table 18 States With All Mail Elections www ncsl org Retrieved July 2 2020 Electronic Transmission of Ballots www ncsl org Retrieved July 2 2020 Signature Verification and Mail Ballots Guaranteeing Access While Preserving Integrity PDF Stanford University April 15 2020 Archived from the original PDF on April 18 2020 Retrieved June 1 2020 Vote at Home Policy Actions 1 and 2 Stars PDF National Vote at Home Institute May 2020 Archived from the original PDF on June 6 2020 Retrieved June 18 2020 Smith Daniel September 18 2018 Vote By Mail Ballots Cast in Florida PDF ACLU Florida Retrieved June 1 2020 Wilkie Jordan October 12 2018 Exclusive High Rate of Absentee Ballot Rejection Reeks of Voter Suppression Who What Why Retrieved June 18 2020 Who Can Vote A News21 2012 National Project Retrieved June 12 2020 Kahn Natasha and Corbin Carson Investigation election day fraud virtually nonexistent The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved June 15 2020 Krebs Christopher Cox November 29 2020 Fired director of U S cyber agency Chris Krebs explains why President Trump s claims of election interference are false In Pelley Scott Cameron ed 60 Minutes Season 53 Episode 13 Event occurs at 11 30 CBS Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Hyun Michelle March 30 2020 The Blue Shift in California Elections Election Updates electionupdates caltech edu Retrieved August 1 2020 Graham David A August 10 2020 The Blue Shift Will Decide the Election The Atlantic Retrieved August 15 2020 Absentee and Early Voting National Conference of State Legislatures Retrieved November 12 2014 a b c d e Stewart Charles 2011 Voting Technologies Annual Review of Political Science 14 353 378 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 12 053007 145205 Statistics on the State of the Nation Before the Presidential Elections 2007 and 2011 Pew Research Center 2011 U S Elections 2012 The Economist 2012 Associated Press published in Business Insider 25 June 2017 Analysis Partisan Gerrymandering Has Benefited Republicans More than Democrats In Federalist Papers No 9 and No 10 Alexander Hamilton and James Madison respectively wrote specifically about the dangers of domestic political factions Baker Peter VandeHei Jim November 8 2006 A Voter Rebuke For Bush the War And the Right Washington Post Retrieved May 26 2010 Bush and senior adviser Karl Rove tried to replicate that strategy this fall hoping to keep the election from becoming a referendum on the president s leadership Election 98 Lewinsky factor never materialized CNN November 4 1998 Americans shunned the opportunity to turn Tuesday s midterm elections into a referendum on President Bill Clinton s behavior dashing Republican hopes of gaining seats in the House and Senate See Anthony Gierzynski Saving American Elections A Diagnosis and Prescription for a Healthier Democracy Cambria Press 2011 See Anthony Gierzynski Saving American Elections A Diagnosis and Prescription for a Healthier Democracy Cambria Press 2011 Cohen Jeff US Elections USElections com Retrieved June 12 2016 2016 Presidential Election Interactive Map 270toWin com Retrieved December 11 2016 Gibson Brittany May 28 2020 The Many Varieties of Voter Suppression The American Prospect Retrieved November 9 2020 Stanton Zack September 26 2021 What If 2020 Was Just a Rehearsal Politico a b c d Parlapiano Alicia October 29 2020 The Upshot How Long Will Vote Counting Take Estimates and Deadlines in All 50 States The New York Times retrieved October 29 2020 Gilens Martin Page Benjamin I September 1 2014 Testing Theories of American Politics Elites Interest Groups and Average Citizens Perspectives on Politics 12 3 564 581 doi 10 1017 S1537592714001595 ISSN 1541 0986 Foreign Governments Have Been Tampering With U S Elections for Decades Politico com Retrieved October 14 2017 Why the Electoral College is the absolute worst explained Vox com November 7 2016 Retrieved October 14 2017 Bump Philip October 13 2014 The disconnect between voter ID laws and voter fraud The Fix The Washington Post Retrieved July 26 2016 Dale Baum and James L Hailey Autumn 1994 Lyndon Johnson s Victory in the 1948 Texas Senate Race A Reappraisal Political Science Quarterly 109 4 595 613 doi 10 2307 2151840 JSTOR 2151840 Key witness testifies to tampering with absentee ballots in N C House race NBC News February 18 2019 Retrieved February 21 2019 Britt said some of the ballots she collected were unsealed and uncompleted and testified she filled out the options left blank for Republican candidates an admission of vote tampering that violates North Carolina law Sanford Levinson The Democratic Deficit in America Sanford Levinson LA Times article available on website October 16 2006 Our Broken Constitution University of Texas School of Law News amp Events Archived from the original on October 5 2009 Retrieved October 10 2009 McDonough Bryanne November 4 2016 Our Elections Are Stupid How to Make Them Less Dumb Reporter Retrieved October 21 2022 Learning Lumen February 21 2019 The Two Party System a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elections in the United States Official website FairVote org Long Distance Voter Non partisan resource for registering to vote or getting an absentee ballot site not found needs updated link U S Election Statistics A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress A New Nation Votes American Electoral Returns 1788 1825 American Antiquarian Society OCLC 176880038 via Tufts University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elections in the United States amp oldid 1132710723, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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