Monday, January 17, 2011

Playing to the Non-Existent "Middle"

Digby sees the administration already writing off liberals as irrelevant to the 2012 election, which Obama will win by ripping the social safety net to shreds and destroying Social Security and Medicare.

But we already know that republicans will never, ever vote for Obama no matter what, and if liberals stay home in a snit, which voters will give him a majority?

Couldn't be the mythical middle, those illusory independents, because they don't exist.

Ken at Down with Tyranny:

Last week with some trepidation I took issue with a writer for whom I have the highest regard, Mark Lilla, for his contribution to the New York Review of Books' post-election coverage. One of my points of disagreement concerned his assumption that Democrats and Republicans are fighting over the same bloc of independent voters, a piece of conventional Village wisdom so deeply embedded that it's hard to even question, but everything I read and hear says it's mostly wrong.

"What we saw in Tuesday’s election," Lilla wrote, "was a large-scale shift of independents, many of whom must have voted for Barack Obama in 2008," and he quoted David Chalian on NewsHour:

In 2006, when Democrats swept into control of the House, independents split 57 percent for Democrats…39 percent for Republicans. 2010, the exact flip—56 percent of independents went to Republicans; 38 percent went to Democrats. That right there is the biggest story of the election.

"Well, no," I wrote,

not if you're assuming that the same voters, not to be confused with the same percentages, flipped D to R. Some did, no doubt. But to a large extent, it wasn't the same independents in the D column in 2008 and the R column in 2010. An awful lot of the "D independents" from 2008 stayed home in 2010, and "R independents" who hadn't shown up in 2008 returned to the polls in 2010.

This seems so clear that I'm astonished how many political "insiders" don't seem to know it. And it's important, because on this misunderstanding rest a whole series of disastrously misguided policy choices. So I was delighted to see one of the smartest writers I'm familiar with, Dave Johnson, tackle this very subject in a "Speak Out California!" blogpost called "The Elusive "Swing" Vote."

Have you heard of the "Moveable Middle?" This is the idea that there are voters on the left who will always vote on the left, and voters on the right, who will always vote on the right, and then there are voters between them who switch back and forth. They are called "swing voters."

So the idea in politics is that in order to win elections you have to take positions that appeal to these voters, and they will "switch" and vote for you instead of for the other side. This is a fundamental mistake.

"No voters 'switch,'" Dave insists, which seems to me an overstatement. I'll bet some voters switch -- you'll always find anecdotal evidence of this. (TV reporters seem especially adept at finding them.) But again, voters who switch almost certainly don't account for a significant portion of the "swing" among "independent" voters.

There are not voters who "swing"; there are left voters and right voters in this middle segment who either show up and vote or do not show up and vote, and this causes this "swing" segment to swing.

The lesson to learn: You have to deliver for YOUR part of that swing segment or they don't show up and vote for you. That is what makes the segment "swing."

Any Democrat politician who thinks that any conservative will vote for any Democrat, no matter how far right they move, is learning the wrong lesson. All that does is cause your voters in that swing segment to turn away from you, and stay away from the polls.

Dave chalks this up as the lesson of Karl Rove, who "understood that you can get the right-voting part of the "middle" roused up to come to the polls by moving the Republicans to the right," and accordingly "got Bush and the Republicans to stand up for conservative principles and refuse to compromise, and the result was that the right-leaning part of the swing segment started to show up at the polls."

He quotes Greg Sargent ("Progressives and centrists battle over meaning of indy vote"):

Independents are not a monolith, and what really happened is that indys who backed Obama in 2008 stayed home, because they were unsatisfied with Obama's half-baked reform agenda, while McCain-supporting indys turned out in big numbers.

. . . The key finding: PPP asked independents who did vote in 2010 who they had supported in 2008. The results: Fifty one percent of independents who voted this time supported McCain last time, versus only 42 percent who backed Obama last time. In 2008, Obama won indies by eight percent.

That means the complexion of indies who turned out this time is far different from last time around, argues Adam Green of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. His case: Dem-leaning indys stayed home this time while GOP-leaning ones came out -- proof, he insists, that the Dems' primary problem is they failed to inspire indys who are inclined to support them.

"The dumbest thing Democrats could do right now is listen to those like Third Way who urge Democrats to repeat their mistake by caving to Republicans and corporations instead of fighting boldly for popular progressive reforms and reminding Americans why they were inspired in 2008," Green says.

In the Obama White House it was apparently a founding article of Rahmist faith that the votes they needed to court were those mythical "centrist" ones, meaning Conservadems and those elusive "independents." But they've never seemed to understand that they're not going to get any more support from right-inclined independents than they will from outright Republicans. You'd think they would have been shaken by the alarming numbers in which 2006 and 2008 Democratic-voting independents stayed home in 2010, for the obvious reason that Dem pols had given them no compelling reason to vote.

As Dave concludes,

The Democrats have taken the entirely wrong lessons, and election results show this. Instead of standing up for progressive values, they give in and "move to the right' on every issue, thinking that there are voters "in the middle" who will then switch sides and support them, when what they are actually doing is convincing those in the middle who might have shown up at the polls to stay home and not bother.


Is it really possible that none of this has occurred to anybody in the White House?

Occurred and was rejected would be my guess.

As Congress reconvenes this week, President Obama has 63 more excuses in the rethuglican House for destroying the middle-class economy in the name of appealing to non-existent "independent" voters.

Blue Texan:

Have the policies of President Obama been good for the Democratic Party? The answer, in the short term at least, is a resounding no.

In 2010, 31% of Americans identified as Democrats, down five percentage points from just two years ago and tied for the lowest annual average Gallup has measured in the last 22 years. While Democrats still outnumber Republicans by two points, the percentage identifying as independents increased to 38%, on the high end of what Gallup has measured in the last two decades.

Without a doubt, there are going to be those (including perhaps Obama himself) who will giddily interpret this poll as a call to “move to the middle” and to “work with Republicans.”

But that’s obviously a mistake, since Republican ID is also still at historic lows — at 29%.

In other words, independents are abandoning the Democratic Party, not because they want Democrats to be more like Republicans, but because they’re seeing less and less difference between the parties in the age of Obama.

Heckuva job.

But also a ray of hope. Those self-identified "independents" are really disaffected Democrats who have no intention of voting for republicans, but are going to need a hell of a lot of incentive to vote for Democratic candidates.

Which means that, unlike the republicans for whose approval Obama is so desperate, these disaffected Democratic "independents" are gettable.

So as you are talking with your Democratic neighbors about the candidates you should be recruiting for local offices right now, add to your list of qualifications:

"Must be able to charm and/or terrify disaffected Democratic voters back to the polls."

No comments: