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  • Primary elections are how political parties in the United States pick their strongest

  • candidate to run for president. The parties do this by holding mini-elections

  • in each of the states and the candidates with the most votes from these elections becomes

  • the partiesofficial nominees; these nominees then face each other in the national election

  • for president. But this isn’t the whole story. There are

  • five things that make it a bit more complicated than that

  • Complication #1: Primaries vs Caucuses In every state, the local party leaders decide

  • how to run their elections. The two most common choices are primaries and caucuses.

  • Primaries are just like standard elections. Go to the polls whenever you can, stand in

  • a long line, hide in a booth, then tick a box or press a button and your vote is cast

  • in complete anonymity. A Caucus, however, is a public vote.

  • People gather in groups wherever space is available then literally take sides in the

  • room with everyone else who likes the same candidate.

  • The groups debate each other and, if people change their minds, they need to physically

  • switch sides. At the end of the debates party representatives

  • count the number of people in each group. If you leave too early, you don’t count.

  • This description of primaries and caucuses is really all you need to know but the specifics

  • can vary wildly. That’s because there are fifty states all

  • of which hold at least two primaries and caucuses for the big parties, and possibly more for

  • the small parties. Covering all the local variants would take

  • a tediously long time which your short attention span for boring political videos wouldn’t

  • tolerateAnd you need to stay focused because there are four more things to cover.

  • Complication #2: Who can vote? In the National Presidential election all

  • American citizens over the age of 18 can vote, with two exceptions, you can’t live here

  • or here. But primaries are in-state elections with

  • lots of different rules. Most states and parties will only let you

  • vote in the primary if you are an official member of the party. This is called a closed

  • primary because the voting is closed to non-party members.

  • But some citizens are independentsand are not registered with any party. If youre

  • an independent and live in a state with closed-party elections, tough luck. No voting for you.

  • Some states, however, havesemi-closedprimaries. Where independents can pick one,

  • and only one, primary to vote in. Parties allow this because the presidential election

  • is often determined by independents so knowing which candidates they like is useful.

  • Finally a few states and parties really play it fast and lose with open primaries. Here

  • any citizen, no matter which party theyre registered with, can pick a primary to vote

  • in. But it’s not just the states that have primaries,

  • theyre also held in the District of Columbia and the oft-forgotten territoriesholding

  • primaries here is a bit odd though considering that territorial residents can’t vote in

  • the actual presidential election. Lastly are the Americans living abroad who,

  • depending on the party, vote in a bloc as though they all lived together in one a big,

  • extra state. When all these elections take place depends

  • onComplication #3 Who Votes When?

  • Primaries aren’t conducted all at once but are spread out over a year. This leads to

  • fights between the states about who gets to be at the head of the line and who is stuck

  • at the back. Inevitably, last minute leap-frogging of dates happenseven though the parties

  • often take away votes from these uncivil states. When it comes to being #1, nobody beats New

  • Hampshire who wrote it into state law that their primary will always be at least a week

  • ahead of everyone else’s. Which isn’t a problem until some other state

  • gets the bright idea to do the same and then we have an infinite loop in our system and

  • have to force-quit the law. But wait, you say, doesn’t Iowa already

  • go first? Yes, but New Hampshire lets them get away with it for two reasons:

  • 1) Iowa’s election is a caucus and so New Hampshire is still technically the first primary.

  • and 2) New Hampshire thinks that Iowa is stupid

  • and doesn’t matter. Other states try to boost their influence

  • not by cutting in line but by forming an alliance and holding their primaries at the same time.

  • The biggest alliance of the election cycle is called Super Tuesday wheredepending

  • on how many states can agree with each otheraround half of them might participate,

  • giving out a whole pile of votes. Which brings us to:

  • Complication #4: Votes That Aren’t Votes. So this whole time youre were probably

  • thinking that citizens give votes straight to the candidates, but no.

  • Instead, the votes are given to a bunch of guys, called delegates, who in turn will give

  • them to candidates as requested to. Maybe. Depending on the state, delegates might be

  • required to vote as the citizens did, or they might be completely free to ignore the citizens

  • and vote for whomever they want. Who are these people? The delegates are local

  • party VIPs, such as state reps and officials. The more citizens who live in a state, the

  • more delegates that state gets. Later in the year, when all the states have

  • finished their primaries, the delegates travel to a huge gathering for their party called

  • the National Convention. It’s here that the official vote to select

  • the party’s nominee for president happens. But it’s not just these delegates who do

  • the voting. Complication #5 Super Delegates

  • Super delegates are the top members of the party such as congressmen and former presidents.

  • They go to the National Convention, not to represent the people, but to represent the

  • current party establishment and can vote for whomever they want.

  • Depending on the party, the super delegates might be up to 20% of the voters at the National

  • Convention. Usually by the time the national convention

  • happens all the candidates save one have dropped out of the race so the convention is just

  • a rubber stamp and a big party. But if the fight between candidates is still ongoing,

  • the delegates and super delegates are the ones with the final decision.

  • In summary: Over the course of a year the states, plus,

  • DC plus the territories, and the Americans Abroad hold their primaries, or caucuses.

  • When finished the delegates representing the citizens who voted in those elections travel

  • to the national convention. Most of the delegates are forced to vote as the citizens of their

  • state wanted them to, but some of them are free to vote as they like.

  • At the national convention the delegates meet up with the super delegates who represent

  • the best interests of the party and together they make the final decision on who will be

  • the nominee for president. Tired? Don’t be, because now the race for

  • the presidency begins. Of course, you can skip all that and jump

  • straight into the election as an independent, the only downside to this strategy is near-certain

  • defeat.

Primary elections are how political parties in the United States pick their strongest

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初選說明 (Primary Elections Explained)

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    稲葉白兎 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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