How to look at the election's prospects
As the protracted primary season finally comes to an end, a veteran political observer offers some ways for anyone to think about the trends shaping the upcoming congressional elections and what will happen when the dust settles.
White House
Seven states (New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Vermont, Delaware, Maryland, and Wisconsin) held partisan primary elections Tuesday. A Hawaii primary Saturday will windup the primary season.
From that point forward, the focus will be on federal- and state-level matchups between the Democratic and Republican nominees, with independent candidacies muddling things in a few states.
Here is what to watch from this point forward in November election campaigns.
Context
The federal party in power — in this case, Democrats — traditionally loses congressional seats in off-year elections. This year the losses are expected to be larger than usual, conceivably giving Republicans control of the U.S. House and, less likely, the U.S. Senate. A wild card this year is the ascendancy of the Tea Party movement. Its emphasis on federal debt reduction, patriotism, and traditional social values has influenced the overall context of debate in the two major parties. The Tea Party label is new but Tea Partiers bearing other labels have made themselves felt since the 1960s as Goldwater Republicans, George Wallace voters, Reagan Democrats, Ross Perot supporters, and "independent" voters with no strong allegiance to either major party andswinging between them.
The continuing financial/economic distress, in particular the high unemployment rate and rising public debt, will be the biggest singleconcern of voters this fall. (That is providing, of course, that major crises do not arise in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, or North Korea and that a major terrorist incident does not occur in the United States. War-and-peace concerns always trump everything else).
Although financial/economic crises preceded President Obama's inauguration, he and congressional Democrats nonetheless are paying the price for their response to them. The TARP funds allocated to Wall Street, the public money devoted to banking, housing and auto-industry bailouts. the health-sector remake enacted against majority public opinion, a non-stimulating but expensive stimulus program, and other programs involving higher public taxing and spending have all been unpopular. Obama, so attentitive to the public mood in his 2008 electoral campaign, has been strangely deaf to that mood in 2009-10. His party's candidates will pay the price for it this fall.
While the Tea Party has helped set the 2010 agenda, it has not done so at the expense of Democrats alone. It has split the Republican Party. Tea Partiers have tried to punish Republican incumbents idenitifed with taxing-and-spending agendas. In some cases their candidates have defeated regular GOP candidates in primaries. In others they have done mischief to eventual Republican nominees. (For instance, Clint Didier, who lost the Washington GOP Senate primary to Dino Rossi, continues to plague Rossi with demands that Rossi swallow Didier's agenda — or else). In several states, Tea Partiers winning GOP primaries have turned out to have questionable backgrounds or foot-in-mouth disase. Democratic incumbents, including notably Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, may save seats they would have lost to more moderate GOP opponents.
Polls
Local and some national polls should be viewed with skepticism. Trust only those polls which have a large enough sample to be meaningful. Even they will have a 3 percent margin of error. Those with a smaller sample can have 5-to-6-point margins of error and, often, have unbalanced voter samples. Trust those polling "likely voters" more than those surveying "registered voters." In 2010, even "likely voters" may not be likely at all, even if they voted in 2008. Additionally, increasing numbers of voters refuse to respond to pollsters or give them outrightly misleading information. In this Year of Insurgency, a bonus of 3 to 4 percent should be allocated to non--incumbent challenging candidates, if only because "throw them out" sentiment is running so high and throw-them-out voters are disproportionately likely to go to the polls this fall.
There is one good rule of thumb. An incumbent receiving 51 percent or better support is usually in good political shape. He or she is known to voters and, after the primaries, continues to maintain majority support. An incumbent consistently polling below 50 percent, however, is endangered. Not necessarily a loser, but vulnerable. Where incumbents and challengers are neck-and-neck---especially as election day nears---the challengers must be given an edge.
Turnout and intensity
Tea Partiers clearly have the most intensity of any 2010 voter group (see above). They are likely to volunteer and go to the polls in large numbers. Senior citizens traditionally have been a high-voting group. In the past, they most often have voted Democratic (given the fact that Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid were Democratic proposals). But today's seniors are a changing constituency. In 2010, they are particularly angry about the cutbacks in their Medicare coverage mandated by Obamacare.
Independent voters, who went strongly for Obama in 2008, now have shifted toward Republicans — in large part because of fear of the looming federal debt bomb. Young voters, also strong for Obama in 2008, are telling pollsters they are less likely to vote this year.
That leaves black and Latino voters, labor-union members, and leftward liberals as sources of core Democratic suppport. But, even there, the news is not necessarily encouraging for Democratic candidates. Black voters are sticking with Obama but are not energized to support non-black candidates this fall. Latino voters are upset by the Arizona immigration law but also upset with Obama and congressional Democrats for failing to enact federal immigration legislation more to their liking.
The liberal base is restless about continuing U.S. involvements in Iraq and Afghanistan. A labor-union organizer, interviewed on a national TV show last weekend, confessed that, when he went door-to-door to energize union members, he often found their radios and TVs turned to Rush Limbaugh or Glenn Beck — a familiar phenomenon dating back to the blue-collar voter shifts of the 1960s and 1970s. Ronald Reagan gained a majority of union-member votes, even though their unions endorsed his Democratic opponents.
Message
Given the above, the messages of Republican and Democratic candidates are not surprising. Here in Washington state, Dino Rossi is pursuing a thene of stop the taxing and spending in Washington, D.C., which resonates with 2010 voters. Incumbent U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, by contrast, is "localizing" her campaign, pointing to the benefits brought to Washington by her national-level efforts. Forced to play defense, Democrats in many races are warning that Republicans "want to destroy Social Security," move jobs offshore, side with Wall Street malefactors who caused the financial crisis, and are captive to political and religious extremist elements.
Obama is blasting Republican congressional leaders from Washington, D.C., and venturing out for fundraising events, as he did recently in Seattle, but is notably absent from congressional districts where his presence would not benefit marginal Democratic incumbents.
Candidates and parties feeling threatened follow a time-honored rule: Change the Subject. That is what Obama and Democrats are trying to do right now. Almost any subject is preferable to Democrats than topics related to finance, the economy, or public debt. Republicans, on the other hand, will keep focusing on these issues and on "throw the incompetents out" themes. Their message can be far simpler than Democrats'. "Time for a change" is always appealing when voters are dissatisfied with the status quo.
Outcome
When it comes to individual races, tea partiers probably will save some threatened Democratic seats. Tea Party-supported Republican nominees are likely to fail in at least a half-dozen key gubernatorial and U.S. Senate races that GOP regulars might have won. The net effect is likely to be continued (but narrow) Democratic control of the U.S. Senate.
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Comments:
Posted Wed, Sep 15, 8:43 a.m. Inappropriate
P.S. to readers:
I probably should have included in discussion of the Tea Party movement that there are many strains of protest inherent in it.
Yes, tea partiers in general oppose more public taxing and spending and
the accumulation of public debt. They also are angry about what they see as the inequities inherent in the bailouts of big shots and big institutions and the prices being paid by ordinary citizens who pay their taxes and make their mortgage payments, have family in military service, save to for retirement and to send their kids to college, and find themselves footing the bill for the excesses of the public officials and private citizens who contributed to financial/economic distress. There also is a strong strain of libertarianism in the movement and a sense that tea partiers are advocating the interests of the belabored individual against an irresponsive collective. So it would be a mistake to label tea partiers as motivated by "right-wing" impulses or, as some have done, by racism.
Tea partiers of 2010 are the most recent of many populist insurgencies which have emerged and re-emerged at vsrious times during our country's history. Normally their messages are heard and, before long, are subsumed within the messages of the major political parties. That is likely to happen again in the wake of 2010.
Posted Wed, Sep 15, 11:44 a.m. Inappropriate
A thorough analysis that separates the wheat from the speculative chaff. The problem for the Democrats is trying to get the electorate to make fairly subtle rational distinctions in the midst of an emotional storm. Anger and fear are not amenable to logical parsing.
So there are really only two approaches that have any chance of working. One is to calm the emotional turmoil; the second is to catch the storm-driven wave of anger and fear and reorient the direction of the political surfboard -- if not precisely toward a sunny shore at least away from the rocks.
I'm not sure that either is possible in the time left before the November election, but the latter surely has the better chance for short-term success. The Democrats need to connect with the anxieties of the electorate and redirect the presently destructive energy vector towards more constructive goals.
Posted Wed, Sep 15, 8:22 p.m. Inappropriate
It's seems a little unbelievable that a political analyst can talk about our Federal elections and not even be aware of the corrosive effect of the Supreme Court 'Citizens United' ruling in Jan of this year. That ruling was definitely a game changer since corporations can now spend unlimited amounts of money on campaigns. On January 21, 2010, with its ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the Supreme Court ruled that corporations are persons, entitled by the U.S. Constitution to buy elections and run our government.
The other significant factor omitted is that the U.S. media is almost nonfunctional. Facts are needed to inform Americans so they can make informed decisions. Yet over 40% of Americans believe President Obama is Muslim when in fact he is Christian due to the racism present in our Corporate media.
Unmentioned in this article was how Tea Partiers are supporting candidates based on completely false information propagated by a corporate propaganda network, embodied by Glenn Beck and the Fox Network. Statements from Tea Partiers such as 'get your hands off my medicare' or 'death panels' or 'victory mosque' show how misinformed these people are by our broken American media. For instance, if the tea partiers knew that Dino Rossi would support dismantling Social Security and Medicare, would they still support him?
Posted Thu, Sep 16, 10:32 a.m. Inappropriate
Same old misinformation and misinterpretation from TVD here, and once again I feel obliged to point these out. Contrary to what he says, the health care reform law expands Medicare benefits on preventive care, drug coverage, and in other areas. It reduces payments to private Medicare Advantage plans covering about 20% of the Medicare population, but it reduces those payments to the same level as the per capita payments for the 80% of beneficiaries in traditional Medicare. Experts say those excessive payments were an unjustified subsidy to insurers.
On TARP, TVD seems to forget that was passed under the Bush administration, and most of that money has been paid back to the government. On the auto industry bailouts, experts say those have been successful in reviving the auto companies and saving jobs. On health care reform, polls consistently show that the individual elements of the law (except perhaps the mandate to buy insurance, which is essential to the rest of the law) are quite popular. On the Obama stimulus plan, again most economists across the board say it was successful in averting an even worse recession and even greater job loss. See http://mediamatters.org/research/201008080008
Finally, polls show little or mixed evidence that the American public is particularly concerned about the federal budget deficit, while the public is greatly concerned about the economy and job losses. That's TVD's hobby horse, not the general public's.
Posted Thu, Sep 16, 11:53 a.m. Inappropriate
I didn't read anything in the article about chronology, I read about voter dissatisfaction and assigning responsibility for things they don't like. "Experts" may say something was unjustified, and they could well be right, but impacted voters are unlikely to read an "expert" opinion. Some "economists" may say things are less worse than they would have been, but that is not an argument that resonates with most voters.
This is definitely going to be an interesting several months. When 31 Ds say "no way to any tax increases on anyone", and when there's no budget in place for the fiscal year starting in a few weeks, it is more bad news for President Obama and for Speakers Pelosi and Reid.
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