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Asymmetrical Politics: Republicans Act Like an Unruly Mob, Democrats Like a Regimented Army
Townhall.com ^ | July 31, 2015 | Michael Barone

Posted on 07/31/2015 6:52:36 AM PDT by Kaslin

As the presidential campaign heats up, and we head into the first debate among the 16 declared Republican candidates, there is an asymmetry between the two political parties.

Republican voters have been seething with discontent toward their party's officeholders and have not become enchanted with any one of 15 more or less conventional politicians who are running. Democratic voters support their officeholders with lockstep loyalty and seem untroubled by the serious flaws of their party's clear frontrunner.

This asymmetry helps explain some otherwise puzzling things. One is why polls have continued for several years to show the Republican Party being disliked more than the Democratic Party, even as both parties get roughly the same number of votes. The reason is that while virtually no Democrats express negative feelings about their party, many Republicans do.

Those negative feelings don't, however, prevent Republicans from voting, however grudgingly, for their party's old-timers in general elections. Polls in 2014 showed the 70-something Sens. Mitch McConnell and Pat Roberts, both members of Congress since the 1980s, in close races in heavily Republican Kentucky and Kansas.

Yet both won with solid majorities and by double-digit percentage margins. Each lost his state's biggest metropolitan area, but McConnell carried 110 of 120 counties and Roberts 102 of 105. Sure, Republicans, especially in rural counties, had been grumbling and cussing them out. But they weren't going to vote for a Democrat or, in Kansas, a Democrat-in-disguise running as an Independent.

They're probably still grumbling about McConnell and Roberts today -- and some of them, at least, are telling pollsters they're voting for Donald Trump. Polling suggests that the current Trump vote is coming in large part from non-college-graduate Republicans who are far more numerous outside big metro areas than within.

That resembles the divide in the crucial 2012 primaries in Michigan, Ohio, Illinois and Wisconsin, where Mitt Romney carried the big metro areas -- Detroit, Cleveland/Columbus/Cincinnati, Chicago, Milwaukee -- and Rick Santorum carried most counties beyond.

Democratic voters seem much more content with their officeholders. That's one reason Barack Obama's job approval rating has held pretty constantly around the 45 percent level, not down below 30 percent where George W. Bush's plummeted when Republicans as well as Democrats and Independents soured on the war in Iraq.

Hillary Clinton is in more trouble than Obama with Independents and Republicans, but continues to receive high approval ratings from every Democratic Party core constituency -- blacks, gentry liberals and Hispanics. Even the Birkenstock Belt folks (dovish, environment-conscious, concentrated in university towns and rural ecotopias), who are boosting Bernie Sanders' numbers in Iowa and New Hampshire polls, still give Clinton overwhelmingly favorable ratings.

That support for Sanders echoes the sentiment for the leftist Jeremy Corbyn in the ongoing contest for leader of the British Labour party. Corbyn has no more realistic chance of becoming prime minister than Sanders does of becoming president. But left-wing Democrats and Labourites love candidates who take positions they support but which they understand are unpopular with the broader electorate. Call it the Bulworth syndrome, after Warren Beatty's 1998 movie.

The Bulworth syndrome operates among right-wing Republicans as well. Donald Trump's incendiary statements on immigration appealed to voters tired of being told that Arizona's attempt to enforce federal immigration laws was bad and San Francisco's attempt to block these laws (with "sanctuary cities") was good.

So conservative pundits eager to sniff out any departure from conservative principle by conventional candidates are championing a candidate who has been anything but a consistent conservative over the years and is a prime example of crony capitalism. He got his start in Manhattan real estate with help from state and city governments after he and his family made the second largest contributions (after the candidates' brother) to Hugh Carey's underdog 1974 Democratic primary campaign for governor.

The asymmetry between the parties' voters reflects their different media environments. Talk radio, conservative websites and Fox News bristle with criticism of Republican officeholders and complaints about their squishiness. That helps sustain a critical frame of mind and a sense, particularly outside metropolitan centers, that ordinary people's concerns are being ignored by a manipulative establishment.

In contrast, Democrats, who fancy themselves as critical thinkers, are comfortable consumers of "mainstream" media in which their "smelly little orthodoxies" (George Orwell's term) are rarely challenged.

So supposedly docile Republicans increasingly behave like an unruly mob while supposedly freethinking Democrats keep acting like a regimented army. Curious.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: uniparty
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1 posted on 07/31/2015 6:52:36 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Or, republicans (not necessarily GOPe) act like a group of individuals with different opinions and points of view, while democrats act like a mindless legion driven by common primitive impulses.


2 posted on 07/31/2015 6:54:32 AM PDT by skeeter
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To: Kaslin

If you’re fed up with the “wet finger in the wind” flip-flopping hacks and looking for consistency in a candidate who loves this country, check out this 3 minute video from 27 YEARS AGO! Seems that Donald — like most of the rest of us — understands that things have become so bad that he HAD to go for it!
TAKE THAT, ESTABLISHMENT GOP!!
https://youtu.be/SEPs17_AkTI


3 posted on 07/31/2015 6:54:59 AM PDT by Dick Bachert (This entire "administration" has been a series of Reischstag Fires. We know how that turned out!)
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To: Kaslin

Only people who lived in the state of McConnell could vote for him. Duh, Barone. Put it to a national vote and see how well he does.


4 posted on 07/31/2015 6:59:02 AM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard the Third: I'd like to drive away not only the Turks (moslims) but all my foes.")
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To: Kaslin

What a sorry title for Barone’s comments. And who cares? At least a few of the Republicans are telling the truth. The Dem’s don’t even know what truth is.


5 posted on 07/31/2015 7:01:02 AM PDT by mulligan (I)
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To: Kaslin
Donald Trump's incendiary statements on immigration . . .

Barone, who predicted a Romney win in 2012, has completely jumped the shark.

6 posted on 07/31/2015 7:03:24 AM PDT by Arm_Bears (Biology is biology. Everything else is imagination.)
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To: Kaslin

“...Republican voters have been seething with discontent toward their party’s officeholders ...”

Understatement of the decade. We handed them TWO historic mid-term wins. And they gave us the back of their hand.


7 posted on 07/31/2015 7:05:46 AM PDT by NFHale (The Second Amendment - By Any Means Necessary.)
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To: Kaslin; Norm Lenhart; GeronL; TADSLOS; Lazamataz; miss marmelstein; MeganC; ...
One thing I don't admire about the Dem's is that (for them) they are Ideologically Pure.

A month ago with this Gay Marrige thing, The Democrat Governor of Missouri said that they will go all for it on the state level.

Just like I knew he would.

Because Jay Nixon is a Democrat, and as such is no different from Nancy Pelosi, Andrew Cuomo or any other Democrat in ANY way.

Any and all Moderate elements of their party was expunged long ago.

They are all in lock step with each other and differ only accidentally.

I wish our side was a united. :P

But all the expunged Democrats came over the Repub side and brought their Big Goverment Ideas with them.

8 posted on 07/31/2015 7:07:31 AM PDT by KC_Lion (PLEASE SUPPORT FR. Donate Monthly or Join Club 300! G-d bless you all!)
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To: Kaslin; Norm Lenhart; GeronL; TADSLOS; Lazamataz; miss marmelstein; MeganC; ...
One thing I do admire about the Dem's is that (for them) they are Ideologically Pure.

A month ago with this Gay Marrige thing, The Democrat Governor of Missouri said that they will go all for it on the state level.

Just like I knew he would.

Because Jay Nixon is a Democrat, and as such is no different from Nancy Pelosi, Andrew Cuomo or any other Democrat in ANY way.

Any and all Moderate elements of their party was expunged long ago.

They are all in lock step with each other and differ only accidentally.

I wish our side was a united. :P

But all the expunged Democrats came over the Repub side and brought their Big Goverment Ideas with them.

9 posted on 07/31/2015 7:08:04 AM PDT by KC_Lion (PLEASE SUPPORT FR. Donate Monthly or Join Club 300! G-d bless you all!)
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To: Kaslin

In other words, shut up and sit down conservatives. The hacks in the establishment know what’s best for you.


10 posted on 07/31/2015 7:20:20 AM PDT by headstamp 2
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To: Kaslin

This is the 1980s reversed. Not good unless Republicans learn from history.


11 posted on 07/31/2015 7:25:06 AM PDT by SoFloFreeper
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To: Kaslin

I used to think Barone was insightful, but this piece is embarrassing.

Democrats are happy with their pols and Republicans are unhappy with theirs because both groups of pols when in office work as hard as they can, within their putative roles, to take the country to the Left.

This unsurprisingly pleases the Dems and displeases the hapless GOP voters.


12 posted on 07/31/2015 7:25:15 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: Kaslin
The reason is that while virtually no Democrats express negative feelings about their party, many Republicans do.

I look at it this way, it depends on whether you think you are the employer or the employee.

The leftists supporters get benefits from their association with the politicians.

The republicans supporters have to pay for those benefits. We feel as if the politicians work for us because we have to pay for their largess.

13 posted on 07/31/2015 7:26:15 AM PDT by oldbrowser (The kangaroos have taken over the supreme court.)
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To: Kaslin

As the Democrats go goose-stepping along.


14 posted on 07/31/2015 7:33:09 AM PDT by MIchaelTArchangel
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To: Kaslin

For the dimmos, it’s really and truly a form of idolatry. Everybody worships something. The atheistic dimmos worship their leadership, at least while they’re in power. That’s why they never say anything negative about their leaders. That would be blasphemy. And that’s why they come unglued when their leaders (’gods’) are blasphemed.


15 posted on 07/31/2015 7:42:53 AM PDT by afsnco
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To: KC_Lion

Yes, it’s true. I grew up in an era when Repubs were disciplined and Dems were all over the place. But in those days, both parties took care of their bases FIRST. With the Republican elite ignoring their base, the base is leaving them. It didn’t take a brain surgeon to see this coming.


16 posted on 07/31/2015 8:02:24 AM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard the Third: I'd like to drive away not only the Turks (moslims) but all my foes.")
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To: skeeter; All
Or, republicans (not necessarily GOPe) act like a group of individuals with different opinions and points of view, while democrats act like a mindless legion driven by common primitive impulses.

Couldn't have said it better myself...needs a thousand bumps
17 posted on 07/31/2015 8:28:45 AM PDT by notdownwidems (Washington DC has become the enemy of free people everywhere)
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To: Kaslin
Polling suggests that the current Trump vote is coming in large part from non-college-graduate Republicans who are far more numerous outside big metro areas than within.

Oh, please. How many Republicans even live in Rat Party city hellholes?

Make up your mind, liberals. Are "non college-graduate Republicans" too dumb to know how to vote? Or are they "the rich" because they are Republicans?

18 posted on 07/31/2015 8:30:09 AM PDT by Albion Wilde (If you can't make a deal with a politician, you can't make a deal. --Donald Trump)
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To: Kaslin
Republicans Act Like an Unruly Mob, Democrats Like a Mindless Mob

FTFY!

19 posted on 07/31/2015 9:29:37 AM PDT by MeganC (The Republic of The United States of America: 7/4/1776 to 6/26/2015 R.I.P.)
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To: Arm_Bears

>> Barone, who predicted a Romney win in 2012, has completely jumped the shark <<

Yes, what a dunce this Barone is. He didn’t predict that Candy Crowley would undercut Romney in the debate just after Benghazi, nor did he predict that Chris Christie would boost Obama over the finish line in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. So of course Barone thought Romney was on track to win.


20 posted on 07/31/2015 11:07:05 AM PDT by Hawthorn
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