United States Election Glossary pt 4

United States Election Glossary pt 4

Part of knowing how to participate in a United States election is to have a thorough understanding of the language and lingo. This is part four of the United States election glossary, including the more prevalent terms that you need to know.

Delegate – This is someone who has been chosen in order to represent a specific local political party during a political convention.

Democrat – This is someone that belongs to the Democratic party.

Democratic Party – This is one of the two major United States political parties. The symbol for this political party is a donkey. The first ever Democratic president of the United States was a man called Andrew Jackson.

Democracy – This is a type of government where the people are responsible for holding the power, either through voting on measures directly, or voting on representatives that will choose measures for them.

Election – This is the process by which people vote either to decide on an issue or to choose a leader.

Electoral College – This is a group of people responsible for formally electing the president of the United States. This Electoral College is made up of delegates from each of the fifty states and three from the District of Columbia. The number of the delegates for each states is the same as the sum of the representatives and the senators added together. The electors assemble in the state capital and place their votes based on the plurality of the votes that are placed in the state or the area that they are responsible for representing. The candidate must receive more than half of the votes from the Electoral College in order to become president.

United States Election Glossary pt 3

United States Election Glossary pt 3

Part of knowing how to participate in a United States election is to have a thorough understanding of the language and lingo. This is part three of the United States election glossary, including the more prevalent terms that you need to know.

Congress – This is a shortened way to refer to the United States Congress, which is responsible for making the laws for the country. The United States Congress is divided into two different sections, the House of Representatives and the Senate. There are 2 senators from each state, making 100 total, and there are currently 435 representatives. Representatives in the House of Representatives are assigned based on population of the states, and each state has a minimum of one representative.

Congressional District – This is an area in a state from which a House of Representatives member is elected. There are currently 435 different congressional districts in the United States, and each one of these districts has approximately 570,000 people in it. The positions in the House of Representatives generally are reapportioned each ten years. Some areas will lose representatives and other areas will gain some depending on their populations during that year.

Conservative – These are people that would like to uphold the current conditions and that tend to oppose any big changes. Conservatives are typically referred to as being “right wing.”

Convention – This is an official meeting where the delegates belonging to a specific party gather to choose candidates and determine what the party platform will be.

Debate – This is a public, formal political discussion that involves at least two candidates that are running for a specific office. In such an event, the candidates will both state and defend the positions of their party on certain major issues. These debates are typically held over radio, television, online or in public places.

United States Election Glossary pt 2

United States Election Glossary pt 2

Part of knowing how to participate in a United States election is to have a thorough understanding of the language and lingo. This is part two of the United States election glossary, including the more prevalent terms that you need to know.

Butterfly Ballot – This is a paper ballot where the actual voting portion is done in the central fold between two pages, such as in a pamphlet-style ballot. Imagine that when open, the two pages are the wings of a butterfly, and the voting itself is done in the area where you would normally find the body of the butterfly.

Campaign – This is a series of different political actions such as public appearances, advertisements and debates that a candidate will use in order to help him or herself get elected into office.

Candidate – This is a person who is running for a position in an office.

Caucus -This is an informal meeting where candidates, representatives and potential voters can gather in order to talk about issues and the preferred candidate, and then everyone can decide which candidate they are interested in supporting and which delegates they want to send to the convention for the political party. Not every United States state will hold a caucus in this manner, however.

Census – This is an official count for how many people are in a specific region. The survey is held by the government on a periodic basis.

Chad – This is a tiny piece of paper that is punched out of a ballot when using a punch-mechanism mechanical voting machine.

Closed Primary – This is a type of primary election where only registered voters that have registered for a specific political party are capable of actually voting. For example, in a Republican primary election, only registered republicans are going to be allowed to vote, since this particular primary would be designed to choose a republican candidate that is eventually going to run for an office in a general election.

United States Election Glossary pt 1

United States Election Glossary pt 1

Part of knowing how to participate in a United States election is to have a thorough understanding of the language and lingo. This is part one of the United States election glossary, including the more prevalent terms that you need to know.

Absentee Ballot – This is a paper ballot that you can mail if you are not going to be able to vote in your home precinct on the Election Day, or if you choose not to place your ballot at your home precinct. You must mail this absentee ballot before the Election Day in order for it to be counted on the Election Day.

Ballot – This is a piece of paper that lists all of the candidates that are running for an office. You use the ballot to cast your votes for those candidates.

Ballot Box – This is the box where the votes are placed at each polling location.

Ballot Initiative – This is also known as a ballot measure, a proposition or a referendum. It is a piece of legislation or law that is being proposed, that people will be allowed to vote on.

Bill of Rights – This Bill of Rights is comprised of the initial 10 amendments made to the United States Constitution. The amendments were ratified back on December 15 of 1791. The purpose of the Bill of Rights was to make sure that all individuals would be entitled to basic civil rights, allowing them to avoid the tyranny that comes with a central government that is overly powerful.

Bipartisan – This means that it is supported by people from both of the major political parties, the Republicans and the Democrats.

Bicameral – This means that it consists of two different legislative branches, such as the United States Congress, which includes both the Senate and the House of Representatives.

Blanket Primary – This is a primary election where all of the names for the candidates from all of the parties are included on a single ballot.

An Overview of the Voting Rights Act of 1965

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was a momentous part of United States history in that it outlawed the discriminatory voting practices that had been responsible for the exclusion of African Americans from voting in the United States.

A Verbatim Statement of the Act

The act specifically prohibits all U.S. states from “…imposing an voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, or practice, or procedure…to deny or abridge the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color.” Congress initially intended the act to outlaw the requirement of citizens to pass a literacy test prior to voter registration. This was an underhanded means by which Southern States thwarted African Americans from applying their rights.

A Summary of the Act

Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson signed this bill into a law following the signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Act specifically established federal control over elections in those states that have historically proven discriminatory voting practices. In order for those states to implement any changes to the state voting laws, they must first contact the Department of Justice for pre-clearance. The majority of these states were situated in the south.

The Renewal of the Act

Temporary sections of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 have been renewed on four different occasions to remain in place. The dates of renewal were 1970, 1975, 1982 and 2006. Congress amended the Act to make a few sections permanent while the most controversial segment, section 5, was to be temporary with constant renewal. The last president to renew the Act was George W. Bush in 2006. The renewal extended the act for another 25 years. When former President Bush signed the act, family members of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks were present in the audience.

Voting American Style

American democracy has been so successful that it has come to the point most of the population takes voting for granted.  The reality is it has not been long since certain ethnic groups and  women were not allowed to vote.  Yet voting is one of the fundamental actions that developed our democracy.

The beginnings of our voting system start in England.  The common people did not have a say or vote.  The vote became the privilege of parliament and councils.  These positions were filled with nobility, the wealthy, and persons who through war, status, or social rank had become gentlemen and earned the right to vote.  This right included a small portion of the population less than 5%.  For most of human history, a few people are rich and the rest are poor, poorer, and poorest.

The first permanent English American settlement was Jamestown.  Jametown is familiar to us because of the love affair between Captain John Smith and Pocahontas.   When the first colonists arrived on the shores of present day Virginia around April 26, 1607, the leaders and the 105 colonists unsealed a box that contained the names of seven men.  These names were the picks for the colony’s council.  These councilors elected a president Master Edward Wingfield.  It was nearly the last time voting happened English style.

As the colonies grew and developed the government reflected the representative style.  Each colony created different voting systems.  Though these voting systems are narrow by today’s standards, the common theme was they intentionally allowed more and more people to vote.  It started with colonists choosing people for their legislatures.  Higher officials were determined by the King of England or by designated officials.

As the lists of who could vote increased and broadened so did our idea of democracy.  Voting creates and maintains democracy.  Voting is what makes America, America.