This blog has been designed to provide information about the activities held at the social studies bilingual sections in CPI Tino Grandío (Guntín,Spain). The English language and Social Studies teachers have elaborated most of the resources you can see but our "auxiliares de conversa" also have their own page and posts. Therefore everyone is invited to have a look .

Saturday, November 3, 2012

CLIL- Elections in the USA

Capitol - from Banco Imágenes ITE

Next Tuesday, the 6th of November it is election day in the USA. This is the basic information to understand the whole process:

Introduction
In the USA there are two main parties. Every president since 1852 has been either a Republican or a Democrat.
This is a "single-member district" system. The candidate who is elected is the one who gets the highest number of votes in their respective state. Then presidents are elected indirectly. The voters are really voting for electors in each state.
In all states, the candidate who wins a plurality, receives all of that state's electoral votes. All together there are 538 electors (in the "Electoral College"). It is very important to win in populous states and certain states are known to be the key to presidency. To win the presidential election, a candidate must earn an absolute majority at least 270 of the 538 electoral votes cast nationwide.

Candidates
Barack Obama (picture from Wikipedia)
Mitt Romney (picture from Wikipedia)
He/she must be a natural-born citizen of the United States, be at least 35 years of age, and have been a resident of the United States for 14 years.
Candidates in each party are usually chosen in primary elections within the year before the election. These can be closed and semiclosed (as in Arizona), open (as in Missouri) or blanket primaries (as in Louisiana).
The two candidates for this year's election are Barack Obama (Democrat) and Mitt Romney (Republican).

Length of term
The president is in office for 4 years and can be reelected only once so he/she can be in office for 8 years.

Voters
Anyone who is 18 years of age can vote. There is no national list of eligible voters, so a citizen must first qualify by becoming registered. Citizens register to vote in conjunction with the place they live so if they move to a new location, they typically have to register again.

How is the president elected?
Voters don't choose the president directly. They vote for electors who are members of a party.

Dates
The election day is on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November.  In December the 538 electors meet in each states’s capitol to formally elect the President.
The congress meets in joint session to count the electoral votes January 6 and the elected candidate will become president on the 20th of January.

Interesting links if you need more information:

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