The Electoral Process
Learning Objectives Students will be able to:
Describe the electoral process in primary and general elections.
Compare the popular vote with the Electoral College as a means to elect government officials.
Explain how a candidate can be elected without receiving the majority of the popular vote.
Contrast primaries and caucuses as ways to nominate
someone within a political party.
Explain the role of local, state and national conventions
in political parties.
Identify key dates for national elections.
Time Needed: One class period
Materials Needed:
Student worksheets
Projector
Copy Instructions:
Reading (2 pages; class set) Activity (3 pages; class set)
STEP BY STEP
Teacher’s Guide
This lesson plan is part of the Politics & Public Policy series by iCivics, Inc. a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing civic education. Please visit www.icivics.org/teachers, for more resources and to access the state standards aligned to this lesson plan. Send feedback to [emailprotected].
©2015 iCivics, Inc. You may copy, distribute, or transmit this work for noncommercial purposes if you credit iCivics. All other rights reserved.
ANTICIPATE by asking students what they remember about the last presidential election. Ask if
anyone went to the polls with an adult, if they watched the returns, and if they
remember who won. If students remember watching the returns, ask whether they
remember seeing a map with states being colored in red and blue. Continue asking
questions until you’ve exhausted students’ prior knowledge.
DISTRIBUTE the reading pages to the class.
READ the reading with the class, pausing to explain and elaborate as necessary.
IDENTIFY the number of your state’s electors by working through the math on page 2.
PROJECT the calendar activity or run the calendar activity section of the PowerPoint.
WORK THROUGH the activity with the class, pausing to discuss. Explain that there is a way to hold
office without getting elected. The Constitution requires that all vacancies in
Congress be filled by an election. If something happens to an elected official like a
senator or representative during their term, the state governor can appoint
(assign) someone to fill the spot until that special election can be held. Each state
handles this situation differently, and some do not allow appointments.
DISTRIBUTE the worksheet activity to the class.
ASSIGN students to complete the activities. We highly suggest working through the
activities together. The PowerPoint presentation is a good way to do this.
REVIEW the answers with the class. (The PowerPoint works well for this.)
CLOSE by asking students to list five facts about elections from the lesson on a piece of
scratch paper and share their list with a partner. Collect the lists as an exit ticket.
Reading p.1
It’s Election Time!
Every four years, our country holds a presidential election. The
candidates debate, hit the road talking to voters, and put
advertisem*nts on television, radio, and the internet. All this hard
work actually starts months or even years before Election Day in
November. So what does it take to go from a hopeful candidate to
a victorious president?
The first public step a candidate has to take is to declare to the
nation that he or she wants to be the president. Then candidates
must get support for their campaign, raise money, and get the
attention of the leaders of his or her political party.
Narrowing the Field
Candidates for the larger political parties are chosen at party
meetings called conventions. The parties hold conventions at the
local, state and national levels. There are two main ways the states
send people to the national convention: the caucus and the
primary. Both methods result in a set of delegates who will attend
the national conventions. The delegates pledge that when they
attend the convention, they will vote for the candidate the state
political party supports.
Party delegates from
each state are sent
to the national
conventions to select
the nominee.
Meetings where
party leaders and
supporters select
candidates through
discussions and
consensus.
And the Nominee is...
Each party holds its national conventions in huge arenas with
balloons, confetti, funny looking hats, and lots of media coverage.
Delegates chosen from each state discuss and debate the
candidates, listen to speeches, and help create the party platform.
Near the end of the multi-day convention, the delegates cast their
votes for the party’s nominee who will run in the national election.
The presidential and vice presidential nominees each make an
acceptance speech that is meant to bring the party together to
support the nominees and forget about the months of debate and
arguments that led up to their nomination. This is the first major
step in getting the national campaign for president up and running.
Barack Obama speaks at the Democratic National Convention in 2012.
Primary Election Caucus System
(less common)
Name: The Electoral Process
Elections host a
secret ballot and people
vote for the candidate
they want to represent
their party in the
national election.
(more common)
Mitt Romney at the 2012 Republican National Convention
The Electoral Process Name:
Reading p.2
Get the Word Out!
A political campaign is the process of
gathering public support for a
candidate. The goal of a campaign is to
deliver as much information about the
candidate and the party’s platform to
as many people as possible. Candidates
campaign in a variety of ways.
On the Campaign Trail
Millions of dollars are spent in the months leading up to the national
conventions, but that is just the beginning! Once the field is narrowed to
the two main party candidates, fundraising becomes even more
important. There are only a few months before the general election, and
each candidate needs to get his or her message out to the American
public. The parties in each state help the candidates with paying the bills
and organizing support.
Direct Mail :
Send information packets directly to voters
Personal Appearances:
Radio & TV interviews, debates and speeches
Printed Material:
Posters, bumper stickers, leaflets, buttons, t-shirts
The Internet:
Emails, websites, videos, blogs, social networking
Election Day!
All of these efforts lead up to Election Day in November. People across
the nation go to the polls and select which candidate they want for the
next president. As polls close from state to state, the news media reports
who is getting the most votes. The next morning, the media announces a
winner of the popular vote, which is a tally of all the votes cast. But
that is just one step in the process of electing the president…
The Electoral College
The U.S. Constitution requires an extra step in the process of
electing the president. This step is called the Electoral
College. Each state has a group of people called electors who
cast the actual votes for president. When people vote for a
presidential candidate, they are really voting to decide which
candidate the electors in their state will vote for.
In December after the election, the electors meet in their state
capitols and cast their ballots. The President of the Senate
collects the votes and counts them. In order to win, a candidate
must have an absolute majority of the electoral votes, which
means more than half the votes.
But what if there’s a tie? If the electors’ votes are split, then the
full House of Representatives votes. If that results in a tie, then
the Senate votes. The elections of 1800 and 1824 both resulted
in ties that were resolved by Congress.
On January 20, the President-elect and Vice President-elect take
the oath of office and are inaugurated.
The Electoral Process
Calendar Activity Projection Master
When is Election Day?
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
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6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
November 2016 An act of Congress sets the day for presidential and congressional elections as the Tuesday after the
first Monday in November.
When is Election Day, 2016?
______________________
Circle the date!
Circle the date!
Electors meet at their state capitols to cast their ballots on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December.
When do the electors meet in 2016?
______________________
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
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4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
December 2016
The President of the Senate
(current Vice President) counts the electoral votes on January 6, unless it falls on a Sunday.
When are the electoral votes counted in 2017?
______________________
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
January 2017
Circle the date!
The Electoral Process
Activity p.1
A. What’s different when there are elections for U.S. Congress? Candidates for the Senate and
House of Representatives have a smaller audience for the campaigns, since they are elected by districts
within a specific state. Congress also goes back to work earlier than the President. How do the processes
compare? Using this information and what you learned in the lesson, complete the Venn diagram with the
letters from the list.
Name:
B. Recount! Occasionally, election
results end up very close and a candidate
may call for a recount of all the votes to
make sure the winner actually is the
winner. This happened in 2000 when Al
Gore and George W. Bush ran for the
presidency. The election came down to
one state — Florida — where the votes
were too close to call.
Bush was declared the winner in Florida,
but there were lots of problems with the
ballots. Gore pushed the courts to allow a
recount in Florida. Bush tried to prevent
it. The Florida Supreme Court ruled there
should be a recount in the districts where
the ballots were in question. Bush
appealed that ruling to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
Which controversial 5 - 4 decision did the
U.S. Supreme Court make?
vs.
Decision A: Get those ballots out and count again!
Bush ends up behind in the recount of ballots. Gore
wins!
Decision B: No recounts! The Florida Supreme
Court can’t order a recount in some districts of the
state but not others. There isn’t enough time
anyway! Bush wins!
Decision C: Recount ALL the votes in Florida, not
just in the messed up districts, fast! Bush takes
more of a lead in the recount and Gore concedes
(gives up). Bush wins!
The Electoral Process Name:
Activity p.2
Cartoon by Steve Sack, The Minneapolis Star-Tribune
1. What is the Democratic message?
(Look at the sign and t-shirt.)
2. What is the Republican message?
(Look at the sign and t-shirt.)
3. What is the purpose of this cartoon?
5. Political cartoons often have captions at the bottom that title, summarize, or explain the cartoon.
Create two different captions for this cartoon, using what you know about the 2000 election.
C. In the Funny Pages The battle over the results of the 2000 Presidential
election between Al Gore (D) and George W. Bush (R) lasted well over a month
after Election Day. The confusion over the ballots, recounts, and election rules
gave cartoonists a lot of material! Look closely at the cartoon below and answer
the questions that follow.
(Remember, the donkey is the symbol for the Democratic Party and the elephant
represents the Republican Party.)
Support the Republican Party’s call to
end the recount.
Support the Democratic Party’s call for
a recount.
Point out that there is a problem with
how both parties are dealing with the
election.
4. What makes you think that’s the purpose?
replace with the below:
http://www.loc.gov/item/2012648653/
http://www.loc.gov/item/2008661840/
The Electoral Process Name:
Activity p.3
D. Vocabulary. Match the definitions to the words they describe.
__1. When a candidate states that he or she is planning to run for office
__2. Party meetings where candidates are selected and the platform is
created
__3. Someone who represents the party views of a state at a national
convention
__4. The person who is chosen to run as a party’s candidate in the
national election
__5. Given by the people selected to run for President and Vice
President at the end of a national convention
_6. A collection of all the efforts a candidate makes to win an election
A) delegate
B) nominee
C) campaign
D) declare
E) convention
F) acceptance speech
E. Something’s Missing! Fill in the paragraph with the correct terms in the word box.
Electoral College popular vote absolute majority electors
Every four years on Election Day, the American public elects the president of the
United States. The first set of election results tallies the ______________, a count of
every vote cast. These results determine whom each state’s ____________ will
support when they meet and participate in the ____________. In order to win, a
candidate must have 270 out of a total of 538 electoral votes. This number is half of
538 (269) plus one, which is considered a(n) ______________________.
F. Ooops! A candidate made a to-do list for his run for the presidency, but he dropped it and
everything got mixed up. Help him out by numbering the items so the list can be put in the right order.
____
____
____
_____
____
____
The Electoral Process
Calendar Activity Projection Master
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
November 2016
When is Election Day?
Directions: Due to weekends and tradition, the government created rules for when election events should occur. Display the projection master. Along with the class, follow the official descriptions to see
when the next presidential election will take place. Answers are below.
An act of Congress sets the day for presidential and
congressional elections as the Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
When is Election Day, 2016?
____November 8___
Circle the date!
Circle the date!
Electors meet at their state capitols to cast their ballots
on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December.
When do the electors meet in 2016?
____December 19___
The President of the Senate (current Vice President)
counts the electoral votes on January 6, unless it falls on a Sunday.
Teacher’s Note: Why does it take so long?
Early in our nation’s history information only traveled as fast as the quickest horse. Electors had to travel, as did the messenger with the results of their voting. Information can travel at a faster pace, now that we have the internet and phone, but a lot of work has to be done between getting elected and setting up a new presidency. The cabinet members need to be selected and approved by Congress, and presidential agendas need to be made.
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
January 2017
SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
December 2016
Circle the date!
** TEACHER GUIDE **
When are the electoral votes counted in 2017?
____January 6____
The Electoral Process
Activity p.1
A. What’s different when there are elections for U.S. Congress? Candidates for the Senate and
House of Representatives have a smaller audience for the campaigns, since they are elected by districts
within a specific state. Congress also goes back to work earlier than the President. How do the processes
compare? Using this information and what you learned in the lesson, complete the Venn diagram with the
letters from the list.
Nam
B. Recount! Occasionally, election
results end up very close and a candidate
may call for a recount of all the votes to
make sure the winner actually is the
winner. This happened in 2000 when Al
Gore and George W. Bush ran for the
presidency. The election came down to
one state — Florida — where the votes
were too close to call.
Bush was declared the winner in Florida,
but there were lots of problems with the
ballots. Gore pushed the courts to allow a
recount in Florida. Bush tried to prevent
it. The Florida Supreme Court ruled there
should be a recount in the districts where
the ballots were in question. Bush
appealed that ruling to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
Which controversial 5 - 4 decision did the
U.S. Supreme Court make?
vs.
Decision A: Get those ballots out and count again!
Bush ends up behind in the recount of ballots. Gore
wins!
Decision B: No recounts! The Florida Supreme
Court can’t order a recount in some districts of the
state but not others. There isn’t enough time
anyway! Bush wins!
Decision C: Recount ALL the votes in Florida, not
just in the messed up districts, fast! Bush takes
more of a lead in the recount and Gore concedes
(gives up). Bush wins!
B E
A C
D F
** TEACHER GUIDE **
The Electoral Process Nam
Activity p.2
Cartoon by Steve Sack, The Minneapolis Star-Tribune
1. What is the Democratic message?
(Look at the sign and t-shirt.)
Keep up the recount until we get the results we want!
2. What is the Republican message?
(Look at the sign and t-shirt.)
Stop the recount before we find out who really won!
3. What is the purpose of this cartoon? 4. What makes you think that’s the purpose?
5. Political cartoons often have captions at the bottom that title, summarize, or explain the cartoon.
Create two different captions for this cartoon, using what you know about the 2000 election.
C. In the Funny Pages The battle over the results of the 2000 Presidential
election between Al Gore (D) and George W. Bush (R) lasted well over a month
after Election Day. The confusion over the ballots, recounts, and election rules
gave cartoonists a lot of material! Look closely at the cartoon below and answer
the questions that follow.
(Remember, the donkey is the symbol for the Democratic Party and the elephant
represents the Republican Party.)
Support the Republican Party’s call to
end the recount.
Support the Democratic Party’s call for
a recount.
Point out that there is a problem with
how both parties are dealing with the
election.
** TEACHER GUIDE **
Answers will vary.
Neither party seems to think the outcome will be fair or correct.
Answers will vary. Answers will vary.
The Electoral Process
Activity p.3
D. Vocabulary. Match the definitions to the words they describe.
_D_1. When a candidate states that he or she is planning to run for office
_E_2. Party meetings where candidates are selected and the platform is
created
_A_3. Someone who represents the party views of a state at a national
convention
_B_4. The person who is chosen to run as a party’s candidate in the
national election
_F_5. Given by the people selected to run for President and Vice
President at the end of a national convention
_C_6. A collection of all the efforts a candidate makes to win an election
A) delegate
B) nominee
C) campaign
D) declare
E) convention
F) acceptance speech
E. Something’s Missing! Fill in the paragraph with the correct terms in the word box.
Electoral College popular vote absolute majority electors
F. Ooops! A candidate made a to-do list for his run for the presidency, but he dropped it and
everything got mixed up. Help him out by numbering the items so the list can be put in the right order.
1
2
3
4
5
6
** TEACHER GUIDE **
Every four years on Election Day, the American public elects the president of the
United States. The first set of election results tallies the ___popular vote___, a count
of every vote cast. These results determine whom each state’s _____electors____ will
support when they meet and participate in the _Electoral College__. In order to win,
a candidate must have 270 out of a total of 538 electoral votes. This number is half of
538 (269) plus one, which is considered a(n) ___absolute majority___.