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Popular Participation: Exercise 7 - Presidential election


Instructions: Read the passage and click on the correct answer. If wrong, try again. Scroll down if you do not see the Answer box.
Click here to review the key terms for this exercise.


The Presidential Campaign

     Presidential campaigns begin after the parties officially nominate their presidential candidate in their conventions. In order to carry out an effective campaign, a candidate must be supported by campaign managers, media consultants (experts who advise the candidate how to use television, newspapers and radio to express his message), public opinion pollsters (experts who carry out surveys about what people think of the candidate), speechwriters, etc. Because a well-organized campaign gives the candidate a better chance of success, campaign plans are made long before the actual campaign starts. The two major parties (Republican and Democratic) usually have different ways of carrying out their campaigns. For example, Democratic candidates often focus on getting more people to vote. The Republicans, on the other hand, try to get the votes of Democrats and independents by asking people to “vote for the candidate, not the party,” especially when it seems that the Republican candidate has ideas that the majority of people might like.

     The campaign of presidential candidates has become very expensive in recent years. In the past, presidential candidates received the financial support of a small number of wealthy contributors. As a result, rich individuals who gave large amounts of money to a candidate were able to influence public policies when the candidate became president. To deal with this problem, Congress introduced the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (amended in 1974). This campaign financing law put a limit to private contributions and made government money available to candidates. The problem of large private donations (financial support), however, still exists. Although the 1971 law has limited what is known as hard money (private contributions directly to the candidates), soft money (private contributions to the parties) is still unlimited. Private groups and wealthy individuals do still give a lot of money to the party of their choice, which the party later uses to indirectly support the campaigns of its candidates.

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