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a party's official endorsement of a candidate for office
Generally, success in the nomination game requires momentum, money, and media attention. |
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The master game plan candidates lay out to guide their electoral campaign. |
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national party convention |
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The supreme power within each of the parties. The convention meets every four years to nominate the party's presidential and vice-presidential candidates and to write the party's platform. |
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A meeting of all state party leaders for selecting delegates to the national party convention. |
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Elections in which voters in a state vote for a candidate. Most delegates to the national party conventions are chosen this way. |
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McGovern-Fraser Commission |
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A commission formed at the 1968 Democratic convention in response to demands for reform by minority groups and others who sought better representation. |
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National party leaders who automatically get a delegate slot at the Democratic nationa party convention. |
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The recent tendency of states to hold primaries early in the calendar in order to capitalize on media attention. At one time, it was considered advantageous for a state to choose its delegates late in the primary season so that it could play a decisive role. However, in recent years, votes cast in states that have held late primaries have been irrelevant given that one candidate had already sewn up the nomination early on. |
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Created by a dozen or so Southern states when they held their presidential primaries in early March 1988. These states hoped to promote a regional advantage as well as a more conservative candidate. |
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A proposal by critics of the caucuses and presidential primaries systems who would replace these electoral methods with a nation wide primary held early in the election year. |
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A proposal by critics of the caucuses and presidential primaries to replace these electoral methods with a series of primaries held in each geographic region. |
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A political party's statement of its goals and policies for the next four years. The platform is drafted prior to the party convention by a committee whose members are chosen in rough proportion to each candidate's strength. It is the best formal statement of what a party believes in. |
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A high-tech method of raising money for a political cause or candidate. It involves sending information and requests for money to people whose names appear on lists of those who have supported similar views or candidates in the past. |
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Federal Election Campaign Act |
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A law passed in 1974 for reforming campaign finances. The act created the Federal election Commission, provided public financing for presidential primaries an dgeneral elections, limited presidential campaign spending, required disclosure, and attempted to limit contributions. |
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Federal Election Commission (FEC) |
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A six-member bipartisan agency created by the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1974. The FEC administers the campaign finance laws and enforces compliance with their requirements. |
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Political contributions earmarked for party-building expenses at the grass-roots level or for generic party advertisisng. Unlike money that goes to the campaign of a particular candidate, such party donations are not subject to contribution limits. |
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political action committees (PACs) |
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Funding vehicles created by the 1974 campaign finance reforms. A corporation, union, or some other interest group can create a PAC and register it with the Federal Election Commission, which will meticulously monitor the PAC's expenditures. |
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one of three key consequences of electoral campaigns for voters, in which the voter's candidate preference is reinforced. |
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one of three key consequences of electoral campaigns for voters, in which the voter is activated to contribute money or ring doorbells instead of just voting. |
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one of three key consequences of electoral campaigns for voters, in which the voter's mind is actually changed. |
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the phenomenon that people often pay the most attention to things they already agree with and interpret them according to their own predispositions. |
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