GovernmentElection 2020: 89 articles to teach you about how American elections really work Election 2020: 89 articles to teach you about how American elections really work Published 3 months ago on October 22, 2020By Jeff Inglis, Politics + Society Editor, The Conversation US Share Tweet How did the U.S. political system get the way it did? jsmith/iStock/Getty Images PlusEditors’ note: In a world transformed by a pandemic, few of the fundamentals in Americans’ lives – schools, jobs, even how to shop for groceries – have remained the same. The same is true with the election, where the most basic of the institution’s elements – how, where and when to vote, among them – have changed.When The Conversation US’s politics editors met to figure out how to provide readers with coverage that would be useful and informative, the approach was clear: a civics lesson. Over the course of roughly 100 articles, our scholars have explained how the U.S. election system works, retold the history of how it got that way and examined what effects and significance those mechanisms have for the nation today.Here, our team has collected all of these articles, divided thematically, from the very beginning of campaigning through what happens after Election Day itself.Eugene DePasquale, left, Democratic candidate in Pennsylvania’s 10th Congressional District, in Harrisburg, Penn., Sept. 19, shows that even the traditional handshake with voters has changed in pandemic-era campaigns. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty ImagesCampaigningBasic elements of political campaigningThe two-party system is here to stayCivility in politics is harder than you thinkGeorge Washington was silent, but Trump tweets regularly – running for president has changed over the yearsThe clothes make the candidate: The sartorial politics of this year’s key Senate racesWhy do people believe con artists?Angry Americans: How political rage helps campaigns but hurts democracyCampaigning in a pandemicPresidential campaigns take flight in the age of the coronavirus Amid pandemic, campaigning turns to the internetFrom recording videos in a closet to Zoom meditating, 2020’s political campaigns adjust to the pandemicCampaign tacticsCampaigns send lots of texts. Jake Olimb/DigitalVision Vectors via Getty ImagesWhy you’re getting so many political text messages right nowWhat’s the best way to get out the vote in a pandemic?Trump’s law-and-order campaign relies on a historic American tradition of racist and anti-immigrant politicsTrump and Biden ads on Facebook and Instagram focus on rallying the basePolitical conventionsDemocratic, Republican parties both play favorites when allotting convention delegates to statesPolitical conventions today are for partying and pageantry, not picking nomineesPandemic alters political conventions – which have always changed with the timesWhat are political parties’ platforms – and do they matter?Money in politicsCory Booker can use money left over from his presidential campaign to run for reelection to the Senate. AP Photo/Patrick SemanskyElection 2020 sees record $11 billion in campaign spending, mostly from a handful of super-rich donorsMoney talks: Big business, political strategy and corporate involvement in US state politicsWhen presidential campaigns end, what happens to the leftover money?Candidates’ debatesThink presidential debates are dull? Thank 1950s TV game showsHow to make presidential debates serve voters, not candidatesLessons on wrangling candidates from the masterful moderator of presidential debates, Jim LehrerDon’t underestimate the power of the putdown in a presidential debateDominance or democracy? Authoritarian white masculinity as Trump and Pence’s political debate strategyVP debates are often forgettable – but Dan Quayle never recovered from his 1988 debate mistakeMedia and public perceptionPresident Elizabeth Keane of ‘Homeland’ is a craven politician who has a ruinous tenure in office. ShowtimePolitical bias in media doesn’t threaten democracy – other, less visible biases doWatch more TV to understand the backlash against the women in the running for vice presidentThe candidate you like is the one you think is most electableWhy is it so hard for atheists to get voted in to Congress?PollingWhen noted journalists bashed political polls as nothing more than ‘a fragmentary snapshot’ of a moment in timeEpic miscalls and landslides unforeseen: The exceptional catalog of polling failurePolitical forecast models aren’t necessarily more accurate than polls – or the weatherVice presidential and Cabinet picksRep. Bella Abzug speaks to a crowd of some 10,000 at ‘The War is Over’ celebration in Central Park on May 11, 1975, where she called for unconditional amnesty for Vietnam War draft dodgers in Sweden and Canada. Bettman/Contributer/GettyFor Biden, naming Cabinet before election would be a big riskDon’t expect Biden’s pick of Kamala Harris for VP to make or break the 2020 electionVP pick Kamala Harris stands on many women’s shoulders, especially Bella Abzug’sBefore Kamala Harris became Biden’s running mate, Shirley Chisholm and other Black women aimed for the White HouseInternational perspectivesRussian media may be joining China and Iran in turning on TrumpWhat could replace the Electoral College? What US election officials could learn from Australia about boosting voter turnoutA voter casts a ballot at a mobile voting station in California in May 2020. AP Photo/Marcio Jose SanchezThe process of votingHistory of votingThe right to vote is not in the ConstitutionThere’s nothing unusual about early voting – it’s been done since the founding of the republic1864 elections went on during the Civil War – even though Lincoln thought it would be a disaster for himself and the Republican PartyA summer of protest, unemployment and presidential politics – welcome to 1932Voter suppressionMilwaukee voters wait in a social-distancing line, some wearing masks, before voting in the state’s spring elections on April 7. AP Photo/Morry GashClosing polling places is the 21st century’s version of a poll taxWhy the Supreme Court made Wisconsin vote during the coronavirus crisisTrump’s encouragement of GOP poll watchers echoes an old tactic of voter intimidationGeorgia’s election disaster shows how bad voting in 2020 can beIt takes a long time to voteHow sexist abuse of women in Congress amounts to political violence – and undermines American democracyMany voters face obstaclesCitizenship delays imperil voting for hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the 2020 electionAs few as 1 in 10 homeless people vote in elections – here’s whySpecific voting groups and blocsAsian American voters leave a Temple City, California, polling place in 2012, in the state’s first legislative district that is majority Asian American. Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty ImagesWith Kamala Harris, Americans yet again have trouble understanding what multiracial meansKamala Harris represents an opportunity for coalition building between Blacks and Asian AmericansAsian Americans’ political preferences have flipped from red to blueWant the youth vote? Some college students are still up for grabs in NovemberHow to reach young voters when they’re stuck at homeWill German Americans again put Donald Trump over the top in the presidential election?Indian Americans can be an influential voting bloc – despite their small numbersWith Harris pick, Biden reaches out to young Black AmericansHow to voteVoting is important. Make sure you know how to do it! Gregory Rec/Portland Press Herald via Getty ImagesWhy there is no ethical reason not to vote (unless you come down with COVID-19 on Election Day)Iowa caucuses did one thing right: Require paper ballotsHow to make sure your vote counts in NovemberVoting in personVoting while God is watching – does having churches as polling stations sway the ballot?Poll workers on Election Day will be younger – and probably more diverse – due to COVID-1919th-century political parties kidnapped reluctant voters and printed their own ballots – and that’s why we’ve got laws regulating behavior at polling placesVoting by mailIn most states, ballots must be mailed in official envelopes. AP Photo/Hans PenninkTiming, signatures and huge demand make mail-in voting difficultMail-in voting’s potential problems only begin at the post office – an underfunded, underprepared decentralized system could be trouble Some states more ready for mail-in voting than others6 ways mail-in ballots are protected from fraudResearch on voting by mail says it’s safe – from fraud and diseaseMail-in voting lessons from Oregon, the state with the longest history of voting by mailMail-in voting does not cause fraud, but judges are buying the GOP’s argument that it doesVoting by mail is convenient, but not always secretHow to track your mail-in ballotStaff of the House of Representatives review Illinois’ Electoral College vote report in January 2017. Samuel Corum/Anadolu Agency/Getty ImagesAftermathHow might the campaign’s endgame be disrupted? Here are five scenarios, drawn from the history of election pollingElectoral CollegeElectoral College benefits whiter states, study showsThe Electoral College is surprisingly vulnerable to popular vote changesSupreme Court reforms, strengthens Electoral CollegeElection integrityEvery vote counts – but what does it mean when election results go to court? Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images‘Stolen’ elections open wounds that may never healIf Trump refuses to accept defeat in November, the republic will survive intact, as it has 5 out of 6 times in the pastJudges used to stay out of election disputes, but this year lawsuits could well decide the presidencyPotential for violenceWhen politicians use hate speech, political violence increasesElection violence in November? Here’s what the research saysWho decides the outcome?Under the Electoral Count Act, Congress supervises the counting of the Electoral College ballots in early January after the presidential election happens. Mark Reinstein/Corbis via Getty ImagesHow Congress could decide the 2020 electionThe case of Biden versus Trump – or how a judge could decide the presidential electionCould a few state legislatures choose the next president?Who formally declares the winner of the US presidential election? 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