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Saturday, 31 May 2014

Informative Analysis About Conservative Candidates Illinois 2014

By Lila Bryant


Illinois is a mid-western state that is a combination of Republican and Democratic voters. Political pundits will sometimes call this a "purple" state. This is because no party is the dominate party. The state is both red and blue. There is fascinating political developments with conservative candidates Illinois 2014 campaigns particularly.

Urban populations with their higher numbers of African Americans and other minorities vote for Democrats. Rural areas vote more Republican. There are deeply rooted cultural and social explanations for this. Minority populations need more of the type of social service programs that Republicans despise. Cities generally require more government spending for infrastructure.

A key idea is that government is too big. There is a belief that there are too many government regulations. These regulations make it difficult for entrepreneurs to grow their businesses, thus, inhibiting job growth and economic expansion. The Republican view is that everybody benefits, rich and poor, when government steps out of the way and lets the free market system do its magic.

There are core values that many people relate too. These values are expressed in various political issues. Some of the most important issues are restricting abortion rights, protecting the integrity of the vote through voter ID laws, and reducing the power of labor unions. Some Republican governors have had great success by ending public employee labor unions, enacting strict laws regulating abortion clinics, and passing tough voter ID laws. Some states have passed laws that have reduced early voting.

The biggest issue for the right-wing is the size of government and how much money it spends. A major tenant of this viewpoint is excessive government spending slows economic growth. The solution to a stagnant economy is austerity measures by government. This is completely opposite of the liberal view which believes in Keynesian economic theory where government spending can kick start a dormant economy.

The key to winning elections is a party getting their base to vote. Voter ID laws in theory will suppress the Democrat vote. However, the strategy could backfire because it will anger voters and galvanize them to organize voter registration drives. Studies have shown that voter fraud is practically non-existent. Apathy is the best way to get people not to vote. Making them angry when they perceive their rights are being trampled on may have the exact opposite reaction.

The elections being held in November 2014 are a mid-term election. Usually, the president's party does not do well in mid-term elections. However, there have been exceptions to this historical trend. The rise of the Tea Party has moved the Republican Party far to the right. There are issues that in the past Democrats and Republicans would have found compromise on. Examples are immigration reform and global climate change. Many voters do not like gridlock.

All politicians face difficult contests. The key to victory will be rallying the base voters to go and vote. Voter turnout is the single key element in winning elections. The party that is better at motivating its base voters will be the party that wins in November.




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