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Direct Democracy
3 November 2009
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A word about the essays…
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Functions of Party Identification
Helps one organise and categorise information Perceptual Screen
Helps one make value judgments. Is Barack Obama more competent than George Bush? Could Bill Clinton be trusted?
Influence Political Behavior Persons who are party identifiers are more interested in
politics, more concerned about who wins the election, and more likely to vote.
party id is the most important determinant of the way people vote
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How do people decide who to vote for? Two Models of Voting Behaviour
Voters as forward thinkers (Prospective Model) Party identification Candidate characteristics Issue positions
Voters looking back (Retrospective Model) Party identification Evaluation of the past
Note that both models agree that partisanship plays a central role
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Measuring Party Identification
“Generally speaking, do you usually think of yourself as a Republican, a Democrat, and Independent, or what?”
Persons who call themselves Republicans or Democrats are then asked: “Would you call yourself a strong (Republican, Democrat) or a not very strong (Republican, Democrat).
Persons who call themselves Independents, answer “no preference,” or name another party are asked : “Do you think of yourself as closer to the Republican or to the Democratic party?”
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Ideology and Partisanship
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Trends in Partisanship (1952-2008)
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Influence of Party Id
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Dynamics of 2000 Presidential Campaign
Source: Johnston and Hagen (APSA 2003) “Priming and Learning: Evidence from the 2000 Annenberg Study”
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Perception of Gore’s Honesty
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Requirements for Issue Voting
Aware of the issue Care about the issue Perceive difference between the candidates Correct about the difference
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Direct Democracy as an Alternative
Rather than voting for representatives, citizens are able to draft and vote directly on policy
Direct democracy allows citizens to be their own “legislators” Direct democracy also allows citizens to set the policy agenda Circumvent a non-responsive legislature
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Recall the reasoning for the U.S. Constitutional
Framework…
America is not so much a democracy as it is a republic.
The whole idea of the Constitution was to limit majority rule, to prevent tyranny of the majority. This is why citizens do not make laws directly, but elect representatives to do so, and supra-majorities or checks and balances are required in every step of legislation and execution.
Nevertheless, the Constitution reserves power to the states to determine their own laws. Many states allow voters to make laws directly.
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Devices of Direct Democracy
The Referendum Government places a question before the voters
The Initiative Allows voters (or some organized group) to define the issue or
question to be voted on The Recall
Allows voters to undo elections by recalling elected officials
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The Referendum
France and the Netherlands recently voted on the European Constitution (2005)
Constitution of Iraq (2005) Australian Republic (1999) Canada “Charlottetown Accord” (1992)—
divisions of powers between federal and provinces Ireland (1995) held a referendum to decide whether divorce
should be legal
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The Initiative—Some Examples
Taxes Prop 13 (California, 1978)
Medicinal marijuana California’s Prop 315 (1996); Proposition 1 (Michigan 2008); Measure 67 (Oregon,
1998) New proposals in California would legalise, tax and regulate the drug in what would
be the first such law in the United States. Tax officials estimate that legislation could bring $1.4 billion a year.
Ban same-sex marriage 11 states (2004); 3 states (2008)
Deny illegal immigrants social services, health care, and public education Prop 187 (California, 1994)
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The Recall
Typically used for local offices Exception-California Governor (October 7, 2003) Signatures Results
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Where Direct Democracy is used
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Advantages
Allows citizens to circumvent unresponsive legislatures (example of term limits and other reforms)
Allows citizens to remove unpopular representatives (example of Gray Davis)
Empowers voters
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Criticisms of Direct Democracy
Original intent of the framers was for a republican form of government
Too much money and “special interest” influence Voters are incompetent Concern about minority rights
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Reasons Californians Support Direct Democracy
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
Gives people a voice
Allows direct participation
Allows for policy change
Forces issues onto the agenda
Makes voters aware of issues
Gets attention of politicians
Source: Table 7.1, p. 135 Donovan and Bowler
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Voter Evaluations of Representative versus Direct Democracy
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Who do you feel generally enacts more coherent andwel-thought-out government policies?
Which do you feel is better suited to decide uponhighly technical or legal policy matters?
Which do you feel gives more thorough review toeach particular aspect of a proposed law?
Which do you feel is better suited to decide uponlarge scale government programs and projects
Which do you feel is more influenced by specialinterest groups?
Which do you feel can be trusted more often to dowhwat is right on important government issues?
Elected Representatives Voting Public Other
Source: Table 7.2, p. 136 Donovan and Bowler