Electing the PRESIDENT [AP Gov Review, Unit 5 Topic 8 (5.8)]

Electing the PRESIDENT [AP Gov Review, Unit 5 Topic 8 (5.8)]

How Do We Elect the President?

Overview of Presidential Election Process

  • The video introduces the topic of how the U.S. elects its president, emphasizing the complexity of the electoral process and its implications for democracy.
  • Candidates must first earn their party's nomination through primary elections, where party members vote on their preferred candidate for the general election.
  • Different states have varying methods for conducting primaries: open primaries allow any registered voter to participate, while closed primaries restrict voting to registered party members.

Caucuses vs. Primaries

  • Some states opt for caucuses instead of primaries; these involve public discussions and debates rather than secret ballots to determine a nominee.
  • The winning candidate from each party is presented at their national convention, marking the transition into the general election phase.

Incumbency Advantage

  • If a sitting president has served one term, they are typically re-nominated by their party; this is known as being an incumbent.
  • Incumbents enjoy several advantages: prior election experience, established public recognition, and existing campaign support networks.

Election Day Mechanics

  • On Election Day (the first Tuesday in November), voters cast ballots not directly for candidates but for slates of electors pledged to those candidates.
  • This leads into a discussion about the Electoral College—a system designed by the framers of the Constitution that limits direct democratic participation in presidential elections.

Understanding the Electoral College

  • Each state has electors equal to its congressional representatives; Georgia has 16 electors based on its representation in Congress.
  • In most states, it's a winner-take-all system where all electoral votes go to whichever candidate wins that state—except Maine and Nebraska which can split votes.
  • There exists a possibility for "faithless electors" who may choose not to vote according to popular vote outcomes.

Electoral College: Understanding Its Role and Controversies

Overview of the Electoral College System

  • The electoral college is a contentious system that requires candidates to secure a minimum of 270 electoral votes to win the presidency.
  • Historical context shows discrepancies between popular vote and electoral outcomes, as seen in the 2000 election where Al Gore received half a million more popular votes than George W. Bush but lost due to electoral votes.
  • A similar situation occurred in 2016 when Hillary Clinton won the popular vote over Donald Trump, yet Trump secured victory through the electoral college.

Arguments For and Against the Electoral College

  • Proponents argue that the electoral college encourages candidates to campaign across diverse regions rather than focusing solely on populous areas.
  • Critics contend that this theory does not hold true in practice, as candidates primarily target swing states—those with unpredictable voting patterns—rather than engaging with all voters nationwide.
Video description

AP HEIMLER REVIEW GUIDE (formerly known as the Ultimate Review Packet): +AP Gov Heimler Review Guide: https://bit.ly/3rfXr2Y GET FOLLOW-ALONG NOTEGUIDES for this video: https://bit.ly/3XMSawp Additional HEIMLER REVIEW GUIDES (formerly known as Ultimate Review Packet): +AP US History: https://bit.ly/44p4pRL +AP World History: https://bit.ly/46rfHH1 +AP European History: https://bit.ly/3PCPyiw +AP Essay CRAM Course (DBQ, LEQ, SAQ Help): https://bit.ly/3XuwaWN HEIMLER’S HISTORY MERCH! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_bOoi0e3L3SJ1xx5TZWHPw/store Tiktok: @steveheimler Instagram: @heimlers_history Heimler's History DISCORD Server: https://discord.gg/heimlershistory In this video Heimler walks you through Unit 5 Topic 8 of the AP Government curriculum which is all about how we elect a president here in America. Presidential candidates are first chosen by primary elections, which can take the form of open primaries, closed primaries, or caucuses. Then the chosen candidates for each party face off in the general election which occurs on the first Tuesday of November. But we the people do not elect the president. The Constitution has established the electoral college for this purpose. If you're asking the question, "what is the electoral college?" then the most basic answer is this: it is an indirect means of electing a president. When the people vote for a presidential candidate, they are actually voting for that candidates slate of electors who will THEN vote that candidate into office (although on occasion an elector may vote against the people, and in that case they are given the unfortunate title, faithless electors).