By ShareAmerica
When Americans stream into polling places November 3, the presidential
election will be the main attraction. But Election Day in the United States
will give voters the chance to weigh in on so much more.
Leaders will be chosen at the federal, state and local levels. And policy decisions will be put directly to
a vote under a ballot initiative system that allows citizens in many states to
decide on questions that can affect their daily lives.
Beyond choosing a president
This year at the federal level, voters will choose a U.S. president, 35
members of the U.S. Senate and all 435 voting members of the U.S. House of
Representatives. (Senators serve for six years, so each election cycle about
one-third of the 100 seats are up for a vote. Every representative’s seat is up
for election every two years, on the even years.)
At the state level, 11 governorships are up for grabs this year, as are
more than 5,000 state legislature seats.
“What a president does on a
day-to-day basis doesn’t affect people’s lives like local and state governments
do,” said Stella Rouse, a government professor at the University of Maryland
and director of the Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement. “Most of the
laws that are passed are passed at the state level.” That’s why this
year’s state elections are particularly important.
Moreover, newly elected state legislators will take part in redoing the
lines that determine congressional districts. It is an every-10-year overhaul
(based on a decennial census) that can help one party or another. “It really
matters who controls the state legislature,” says Josh Chafetz, a law professor
at Cornell University.
State elected officials are important when gridlock among elected
officials in Washington slows federal lawmaking. “We should look to the
states,” Rouse said. “They are filling the void in passing policies” in areas
such as immigration.
Local officials like mayors and city council members get more
consideration during a presidential election year, when voter turnout is high.
That’s good because they govern issues close to voters’ hearts, like which
streets get repaired, whether improvements are made to local schools and
whether the regional economy gets a boost.
Policy by the people
Twenty-four states also let voters partly bypass the elected officials
and have their say directly on issues through ballot initiatives. Initiatives
became popular in 1978, when California voters slashed property taxes under
something called Proposition 13. Other measures that have passed in some states
tightened gun laws, raised the minimum wage for workers and created independent
commissions to oversee redistricting.
Rouse said the theory behind ballot initiatives is to give more power to
the people. But the costs of mounting ballot campaigns — including paying
lawyers to draw up the wording and buying advertisements — have gotten so high
they are less accessible today to individuals.
How will the winners govern?
The U.S. system of sharing power between different levels of government
is based in the Constitution, which divides power between state and federal
officials, with the states sharing their authority with local government.
“There are some things you want to coordinate at the national level,”
Chafetz said, like national defense. “There are plenty of other policies [for
which] there’s no reason they should be uniform everywhere. What federalism
does, in theory, is allow both.”
Voters get to choose, for instance, whether they want a high level of
services and higher taxes in their state, while voters in another state can
pick the opposite.
Federalism can lead to conflict between state and national officeholders
but also leads to better policies, according to Rouse. “Dividing power and the
constant push and pull between national and state governments is a good thing,”
she said. “When you go through that process, what comes out as policy is about
as good as you can get.”
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