midterm election
Political Science
Sociology
Examples of midterm election in the following topics:
-
The 2010 Elections
- The 2010 midterm elections, for national, state, and local governments, resulted in an overwhelming victory for the Republican Party.
- The 2010 midterm elections on November 2, 2010 filled 435 seats in the U.S.
- However, voter turnout was still slightly higher than the last midterm elections in 2006 and more states gained than lost voters.
- The Republican victories during the 2010 midterm elections can be attributed to a number of factors.
- Secondly, public trust in Congress had diminished with a series of scandals in which Democratic Representatives Charlie Rangel and Maxine Waters, along with Republican Senator John Ensign, were accused of unethical and/or illegal conduct prior to the midterm elections.
-
Midterm elections and unemployment
- Presidential election.
- The set of House elections occurring during the middle of a Presidential term are called midterm elections.
- In America's two-party system, one political theory suggests the higher the unemployment rate, the worse the President's party will do in the midterm elections.
- We consider every midterm election from 1898 to 2010, with the exception of those elections during the Great Depression.
- The percent change in House seats for the President's party in each election from 1898 to 2010 plotted against the unemployment rate.
-
The Clinton Administration Moves Right
- In the 1994 midterm election, the Republican party gained control of both the House and the Senate and retained this majority until 2006.
- The "Republican Revolution," "Revolution of 1994," or "Gingrich Revolution" is what the media dubbed the Republican Party (GOP) success in the 1994 U.S. midterm elections, which resulted in a net gain of 54 seats in the House of Representatives, and a pickup of eight seats in the Senate.
- After the 2000 election, the Senate was divided evenly between the parties, with Republicans retaining the right to organize the Senate due to the election of Dick Cheney as Vice President and ex officio presiding officer of the Senate.
- However, in the 2010 elections, in what was very similar to the 1994 elections, Republicans won back control of the House.
- The 1994 elections also ushered in a great number of Republican freshmen.
-
Depression Politics
- The midterm elections of 1894 brought a major Republican victory and fragmented the Democratic Party.
- House election of 1894 was a realigning election—a major Republican landslide that set the stage for the decisive Election of 1896.
- The elections of members of the United States House of Representatives in 1894 came in the middle of President Grover Cleveland's second term.
- The Democrats lost 125 seats in the election while the Republicans gained 130 seats.
- This makes the 1894 election the largest midterm election victory in the entire history of the United States.
-
The Modern Era of Political Parties
- One of these two parties has won every United States presidential election since 1852 and has controlled the United States Congress since at least 1856.
- The current President of the United States, Barack Obama, is the 15th Democrat to hold the office, and since the 2006 midterm elections, the Democratic Party has held a majority in the United States Senate.
- The party's nominee for President of the United States in the 2012 presidential election is former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.
- Since the 2010 midterm elections, the Republicans have held a majority in the United States House of Representatives.
- The 2008 elections, while won by a Democrat, reflect the relatively even divide in the United States between the Republican and Democratic Parties.
-
Party Organization
- The president of the United States, Barack Obama, is the 15th Democrat to hold the office, and since the 2006 midterm elections, the Democratic Party is the majority party for the United States Senate.
- Several third parties also operate in the United States and from time to time, elect someone to local office.
- These two parties have won every United States presidential election since 1852 and have controlled the United States Congress since at least 1856.
- The Democratic Party, since the division of the Republican Party in the election of 1912, has positioned itself as progressive and supporting labor in economic as well as social matters.
- The president of the United States, Barack Obama, is the fifteenth Democrat to hold the office, and since the 2006 midterm elections, the Democratic Party is the majority party for the United States Senate.
-
Understanding regression output from software
- That is, the data do not provide convincing evidence that a higher unemployment rate has any correspondence with smaller or larger losses for the President's party in the House of Representatives in midterm elections.
- Output from statistical software for the regression line model- ing the midterm election losses for the President's party as a response to unemployment
- The shaded tail represents the p-value for the hypothesis test evaluating whether there is convincing evidence that higher unemployment corresponds to a greater loss of House seats for the President's party during a midterm election.
-
Voting as Political Participation
- How many people actually participate in elections often depends on the type of election.
- A large number of elections are held in the United States every year, including local elections, elections for county and statewide offices, primaries, and general elections.
- Midterm elections, in which members of Congress run for office in nonpresidential-election years, normally draw about one-third of eligible voters.
- Young voters are less likely to turn out in midterm elections than older citizens.
- Turnout in presidential elections in the 1960s was over 60 percent.
-
Regulating Campaign Finance
- In 2008—the last presidential election year—candidates for office, political parties, and independent groups spent a total of $5.3 billion on federal elections.
- In 2008—the last presidential election year—candidates for office, political parties, and independent groups spent a total of $5.3 billion on federal elections.
- In the 2010 midterm election cycle, candidates for office, political parties, and independent groups spent a total of $3.6 billion on federal elections.
- The grants for the major parties' conventions and general election nominees are adjusted each Presidential election year to account for increases in the cost of living.
- Assess the origins, scope, and impact of money spent on election campaigns
-
The Election of 1936
- The presidential election of 1936 was the most lopsided U.S. presidential election in terms of electoral votes and the second biggest victory in terms of the popular vote.
- The presidential election of 1936 between Franklin D.
- Despite the eventual landslide results, the outcome of the 1936 election did not seem certain in the months prior to the election.
- His correct predictions made public opinion polling a critical element of elections for journalists and politicians and the Gallup Poll would become a staple of future presidential elections,
- Although after the 1936 election some political pundits predicted the virtual extinction of the Republican Party, Republicans would make a strong comeback in the 1938 midterm congressional elections.