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Next Steps: Why the Democrats lost, and where they go from here (a Democrat perspective)
The American Prospect ^ | 11-12-02 | Ruy Teixeira (co-author of The Emerging Democratic Majority)

Posted on 11/29/2002 8:23:13 PM PST by GraniteStateConservative

Next Steps

Why the Democrats lost, and where they go from here

Let's try to organize our thinking about this election, shall we? (Those who prefer to panic may leave the room.) We'll look at four topics, in the following order:

-- What happened?
-- Why did it happen?
-- Where did it happen?
-- What does it all mean, especially for future Democratic politics?

What Happened?

Consider the following numbers:

Senate: -2
House: -5
Governors: +3

These are, of course, the Democratic net losses (and gains) in the 2002 election. Repeat them to yourself several times; they do not seem, on the face of it, to indicate a Republican tsunami that swept away everything in its path. In fact, these numbers suggest the partisan balance of the country, at least in terms of voting and public support, has changed only slightly. This is different from, say, 1994, when huge Republican gains (52 House seats, nine Senate seats, 10 governors) really did dramatically change the partisan balance.

But, when the country is divided as evenly as it currently is, small changes can have big effects. That's just the mathematics of the situation: going from 49 to 51 to 51 to 49 in the Senate makes a big difference -- much more than going from 47 to 49 to 49 to 51 or from 51 to 49 to 53 to 47. So the very evenness of partisan division in the country lends itself to sudden lurches in political power driven by only small switches in public sentiment. And that's what we had in this election.

So why are Democrats so upset -- if not suicidal -- about this election? One factor, of course, is that the effect of changing the Senate from razor-thin Democratic control to razor-thin Republican control is greatly magnified by preexisting Republican control of the House and the presidency. Unified control of Congress and the executive branch gives the Republicans an undeniable and very large lift in terms of implementing their agenda and Democrats are (reasonably) very worried about this.

Another factor is how the Democrats lost. In every Senate race (except South Dakota) that was close or had the potential to be close, the Democrats lost. They lost Missouri 50 percent to 49 percent, Minnesota 50 percent to 47 percent, New Hampshire 51 percent to 47 percent, Colorado 51 percent to 46 percent, Georgia 53 percent to 46 percent, North Carolina 54 percent to 45 percent and Texas 55 percent to 43 percent. That hurts, because the Democrats had expectations -- or, at any rate, reasonable hopes -- in each and every one of these elections. No one thought, of course, that they would win them all. But no expected them to lose them all either.

So why did Democrats have high expectations in the first place? That gets to the third factor: The economy has been performing poorly and that should have benefited the "out party" -- the Democrats. According to Greenberg Quinlan Rosner's (GQR) just-released post-election poll, 70 percent of voters on election day thought that economic conditions were only fair or poor. And no wonder voters thought that: The stock market has collapsed, decimating many voters' 401(k) retirement accounts; unemployment is up; the corporate sector is racked with scandals; the budget surplus is gone; economic growth is slowing; and consumer confidence is at its lowest level since 1993. Add to this the traditional advantage of the out party in midterm elections and it's no wonder that the Democrats had some optimism going into Tuesday's election.

Why Did It Happen?

So, why did it happen? How did the Democrats manage to sustain these losses when as little as a week before the election it looked like they might actually gain a seat or two in the Senate, not lose control?

What happened in the last week -- really in the last five days -- was a pro-Republican surge among likely voters, which was neatly captured in a Gallup Poll released on Nov. 4. In that poll, Republicans had a 6-point advantage on the generic congressional question, "Who would you vote for if the election were held tomorrow?" That reversed a 3-point deficit for the Republicans that Gallup had measured 10 days earlier.

What happened in the last five days, of course, was President Bush's barnstorming tour of battleground states, where he rallied the troops and excoriated the Democrats for standing in the way of his efforts to make America secure in a perilous world. In fact, if you look at Bush's standard stump speech during this tour, only the first seven paragraphs were devoted to taxes and the economy; the other 20 paragraphs -- and the greatest applause lines -- were reserved for homeland security and the struggle against terrorism.

That focus worked, helping rally the Republican faithful and remind swing voters about the war on terrorism -- something they strongly support and something they associate much more with Bush and the Republicans than with Democrats. Indeed, the Democrats had basically ceded the issue to the Republicans with their hasty approval of the Iraq resolution in Congress, which appeared motivated by nothing more than a desire to get the issue out of the way so that they could talk about prescription drugs and Social Security. And the Democrats' national security bona fides were not, shall we say, enhanced by the prolonged fight over the homeland-security bill, which stalled over worker protection and unionization issues.

The way that Republicans' identification with the war on terrorism boosted their vote totals was vividly illustrated in the GQR poll, which showed that the top reason for voting -- or considering voting -- Republican in the election was "to support the war on terrorism and a strong military." And the second most common reason was "to support President Bush." Being preferred by 39 points as the party best able to keep America strong clearly pays dividends.

How successful was the Democratic effort to counter this advantage by focusing on domestic issues? Not very. In the GQR poll, the Republicans were preferred over the Democrats by 3 points on the economy and by 1 point on the budget and deficits. Because the economy was the No. 1 issue in the election, according to most pre-election polls, this was obviously quite a problem for the Democrats.

Of course, the Democrats didn't offer much of a plan on the economy. Indeed, in the GQR poll, two-thirds of voters agreed that "candidates did not set out clear positions on how to deal with the economy." Democrats assumed that clear positions on the economy weren't necessary -- negative perceptions about the economy would help them, regardless of whether they actually said anything specific about it. They were wrong.

And what about prescription drugs, the issue on which so many Democratic hopes rested? It's true that voters tended to favor the Democrats as the party better able to handle the issue; the problem was that voters couldn't figure out how the two parties' current approaches to prescription drugs actually differed. The GQR poll found a plurality (43 percent) agreeing that "this year, the Republican and Democratic candidates supported a prescription-drug benefit for seniors." Just 34 percent thought "the Republican and Democratic candidates disagreed about prescription drugs." This isn't exactly the product differentiation you want on your signature issue.

Where Did It Happen?

So the Democrats' domestic program -- such as it was -- proved an inadequate counterweight to a Republican surge based on national security in the final days of the campaign. Where did this hurt them the most -- that is, cause them to lose when they might perhaps have won?

As one might expect, Democrats' closest Senate losses were in closely divided "blue" states (Minnesota) or in "red" states where the Democrats are developing a competitive position (Missouri, New Hampshire, Colorado). Thus, at the edges of the blue coalition that the Democrats are seeking to develop, the Republicans were able to hold the line and even make gains. And, of course, they picked up one state (Georgia) that is solidly red and where the national-security issue clearly tipped the race.

On the gubernatorial level, the story was different. Here, national-security concerns were less likely to be relevant and therefore less likely to hurt the Democrats' efforts to put together a majority coalition. This is illustrated by the Democrats' ability to pick up 10 seats, including four medium-to-large Midwestern states (Illinois, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin) that are critical to maintaining their coalition and a couple of sizable states (Tennessee and, especially, Arizona) where the Democrats can reasonably hope to be competitive in the future. While the Republicans did pick up seven seats, only one of them (Georgia) can be considered a critical part of their coalition and only one (tiny New Hampshire) was in a swing state.

Looking at some of the Senate states that Democrats lost, preliminary analysis suggests that a couple of things were going on. First, while turnout across the United States was up from 1998 -- from 37.6 percent to 39.3 percent of the voting-age population, according to the Committee for the Study of the American Electorate -- it appears to be the case that in strongly Democratic large cities the increase in turnout was less than in strongly Republican areas in cities' outer suburbs or in rural areas. For example, in Missouri, the increase in votes cast from 1998 to 2002 was less in strongly Democratic St. Louis than in the strongly Republican suburb of St. Charles County or, especially, in rural and fervently Republican Cape Girardeau County. The same pattern can be seen in Minnesota where many of the more rural counties cast almost as many votes in 2002 as in 2000, while the more urban counties lagged behind.

But the other, and perhaps more important, part of the story was the reduction of Democratic support in Democratic-leaning suburban or mixed suburban-urban counties, where Republican success in picking off swing voters was likely to manifest itself. For example, in St. Louis County in Missouri, Jean Carnahan's margin over Jim Talent was only 3 points, down from the 8 points her late husband carried the county by in 2000. And in Hennepin and Ramsay counties in Minnesota, Walter Mondale's margins over Norm Coleman were substantially less than Mark Dayton's over Rod Grams in 2000 (11 points and 10 points less, respectively). But in the completely urban city of St. Louis, the Democratic margin was much the same as in 2000.

So it seems likely that a failure of core Democratic areas to match turnout increases in heavily Republican areas -- plus a shift away from the Democrats in Democratic-leaning suburbs -- were the factors responsible for many of the Democrats' key losses. Taken together, these trends meant that Democrats could not prevent highly-mobilized Republican areas from dominating these electoral contests.

What Does It All Mean?

The logic of the analysis presented here suggests several things that Democrats need to pay attention to:

First, they need a national-security policy that is a plausible alternative to the Republicans. Voters want to know what the Democrats are going to do to make them feel safer; so far the Democrats have really had no answer other than to support the president and occasionally mutter criticisms of how he's going about things. Moving forward to 2004, they will need to develop a more imaginative approach or Republicans will continue to dominate the issue, with predictably negative political effects.

Second, they need a domestic-policy agenda that goes beyond prescription drugs and defending Social Security. That starts with a clear approach to improving the economy and should probably also include new programs in education, where the Democrats opened up a wide lead on the issue in the months prior to the election, but then had no advantage at all among voters on election day. Call it "E2" -- and then throw in the environment and energy, where Democrats continue to enjoy large advantages, to make it "E4." This has to be better than the issue of prescription drugs, which seems to do more to confuse voters than to rally them toward the Democrats.

Finally, avoid an unproductive debate on mobilization versus winning over swing voters. Both are clearly important and a plausible national-security program combined with an imaginative domestic agenda would go far toward accomplishing both goals.

Ruy Teixeira is a senior fellow at The Century Foundation. His new book, with John Judis, The Emerging Democratic Majority, was just published by Scribner.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
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1 posted on 11/29/2002 8:23:13 PM PST by GraniteStateConservative
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To: GraniteStateConservative
Good, solid moderate advice from Ruy Teixeira. However scant chance the Democratic Party will heed it in the interim to regain the lost ground needed to gain a national majority in Congress and the statehouses.
2 posted on 11/29/2002 8:30:03 PM PST by goldstategop
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To: GraniteStateConservative
Quite an intelligent piece actually. I largely agree with it, although just what the Dems can say about the economy (other than that it is bad if it is bad), or about education given their imprisonment by the teachers' union, other than that bogus and expensive smaller class size issue, escapes me.
3 posted on 11/29/2002 8:30:30 PM PST by Torie
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To: GraniteStateConservative
Voters want to know what the Democrats are going to do to make them feel safer;

As long as the Dimocraps think national security is about feelings, they will continue to lose.

4 posted on 11/29/2002 8:39:56 PM PST by Valpal1
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To: GraniteStateConservative
First, they need a national-security policy that is a plausible alternative to the Republicans

The democRATS have been anti-military so long, any national security plan they come up with will be justifiably viewed with sceptisim.

Second, they need a domestic-policy agenda that goes beyond prescription drugs and defending Social Security. That starts with a clear approach to improving the economy and should probably also include new programs in education

The democRTAS response to everything seems to be - spend more money. Any domestic-policy agenda the democRTAS come up with will be bound to follow the same ploicy. But for the government to spend more money means more taxes, which will have a chilling effect on the economy. The new programs in education obviously means an increase in spending, as will any domestic-policy agenda that goes beyond prescription drugs and defending Social Security

Finally, avoid an unproductive debate on mobilization versus winning over swing voters

Without winning over swing voters, the democRATS have no hope of winning elections, no matter how mobolized their base is.

5 posted on 11/29/2002 8:41:30 PM PST by Badger1
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To: GraniteStateConservative
These people have a screw lose. Here we go with the gallop pole caught a surge.

People change very little as a campaign progresses. It takes a major outsice stimulus to change thigs. If some of these book writers would actually go out and poll they would find the margins change very little compared to the turn out. People were pretty well decided weeks before the election.

A presidents coming and going is not a big deal unless what he does effects the get out the vote efforts. In this last election the Repubicans for the first time in my memory has a ground game. Rove had proved in 2000 with some experimental precincts that real live local people calling voters increased repubican turn out by 5.2 percent.

So this time in 41 states Republicans used real local people to make calls to registered voters. A lot of the people at the Bush rallies were the people recruited to contact voters. They got a real pep talk about working to get out the vote. They left and did exactly that. In a state with 1.5 million republican votes that made a differnce of about 80,000 votes. It made a real difference.

But those of you who have been following Louisiana know that the differnece between the polls is turnout. IN louisiana that is black turn out and white turn out. One pollster counted black turn out at 28 percent. He showed a big big Landrieu win. The problem is the highest Black turn out in hisory is 26 percent and 23 percent is the average. If you use 25 percent it shows a Terrell victory. 26 percent shows a tie. 27 percent a landriew victory and 28 a Landrieu blow out.Most of the pulblic polls in the 2002 election exagerated the Black turn out. Most of the public polls in 2000 underestimated the Black turn out.

The nation is gradually trending right. The majority of State legislatures are under Republican control for the first time since 1932. The Republicans have a majority of state legislatures. They have both houses of congress and the presidency.

The biggest change I see is that Democrats are mostly running liberal democrats for office. For the most party the Republicans are runing people who can win. They ran a leftist Coleman in Minnesota. They ran a very centrist in Missouri. They ran a centrist in New Hampshire and North Carolina. They ran conservatives in Georgia and Texas.

I think the democrats are running people who toe the party line. The repubicans are running people who can win.

That means the conservatives will run the nation for the nest few years.

If the democrats don't stop running on gut reactions they are going to be out on their a$$.


6 posted on 11/29/2002 8:46:28 PM PST by Common Tator
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To: GraniteStateConservative
It may not make any difference what the democrats do. The country is moving a little to the right, the Republicans are moving towards the center, and the Democrats are moving further to the left.

I would expect more gains in the next elections.

7 posted on 11/29/2002 8:46:42 PM PST by CIB-173RDABN
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To: GraniteStateConservative
Where will the democrats go from here?

My suggestion would be hell.

However, if they went to hell, my sympathies would be with the devil.
8 posted on 11/29/2002 8:47:13 PM PST by sport
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To: GraniteStateConservative
"The Emerging Democratic Majority"? I think he wrote that book 20 years too late. He should rename the book:
"THE EMERGING DEMOCRATIC BLAME GAME EXPANSION".
10 posted on 11/29/2002 8:51:41 PM PST by webber
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To: GraniteStateConservative
What the Democrats really need to do is to get back to basics: confiscatory tax policy, racial quotas, appeasement of terrorists and despots, abortion on demand, and foreign policy dictated by the UN. These are positions that all Americans can get behind. Daschle & Pelosi, are you listening??
11 posted on 11/29/2002 8:55:14 PM PST by Chest Rockwell
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To: You Know Not The Hour
There was no issue to cause a material secular swing against the "in" party. Bush skillfully denied the opposition that by focusing the issue on national security, and triangulating on the mommy issues. I don't consider the election a critical election. The movement on the ground was minimal, and mostly due to low Democrat turnout.
12 posted on 11/29/2002 8:56:42 PM PST by Torie
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To: Chest Rockwell
ANd don't forget deep defense cuts. The weaker our military is, the better for Dems.
13 posted on 11/29/2002 8:59:14 PM PST by Hillarys Gate Cult
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To: Common Tator
Nice reply.

My instincts tell me that the reasoned Democrats (are there any?) will be at odds with the wacky left in the party. This will make for a cocktail of deviousness and shrillness. In the meantime, Bush and company will not be sitting on their hands. The President has the initiative and the momentum. He will define the next battle and many battles thereafter. It will be an uphill run for the Dems. FWIW.

14 posted on 11/29/2002 9:06:13 PM PST by VRW Conspirator
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To: GraniteStateConservative
bump for later
15 posted on 11/29/2002 9:06:33 PM PST by GOPJ
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To: GraniteStateConservative
Ruy Teixeira is a senior fellow at The Century Foundation. His new book, with John Judis, The Emerging Democratic Majority, was just published by Scribner.

I saw this guy's book. It reads like Mein Kampf. The basic premise is that whites are becoming extinct in their own country, once the majority population is non-white third world immigrants, domination by democratic socialists will be guaranteed, and the US will become just as progressive as all the other central/south american states.

16 posted on 11/29/2002 9:08:29 PM PST by Godel
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To: webber
The rats lost because they are still trying to sell the same old stuff that worked in 1932. They are so caught up defending each of their core groups that they have become void of anything new. Watch what happens to them when GWB makes tort reform #1 on the list. What will they do then?
17 posted on 11/29/2002 9:08:52 PM PST by bybybill
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To: GraniteStateConservative
Why did they lose?

Bill and Walter mourning Paul Wellstone.

18 posted on 11/29/2002 9:10:41 PM PST by SFConservative
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To: CIB-173RDABN
IMO the extremely close margin in the 2000 election woke up a lot of Pubbies. The fear factor is a wonderful thing. It put the fear of God in Pubbie voters in the suburbs and rural areas.

On voting day this year, I saw a retirement home bus pull up to the polling place. This was in the Republican suburbs and I'd imagine those voters were largely Republican. The Dems DON'T have a lock on the senior citizen vote or the woman vote, no matter what they claim.

19 posted on 11/29/2002 9:10:48 PM PST by Ciexyz
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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