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Reactionary Kerry (an interesting analysis on Kerry's electability)
National Review Online | 3/11/04 | John Samples

Posted on 03/11/2004 7:31:41 AM PST by KJacob

The Democratic party has followed its head rather than its heart in selecting its 2004 presidential nominee. While Howard Dean gave full voice to antiwar sentiment and Bush hatred, polls say John Kerry won the prize by being the most electable. Headlines and current polling seem to be backing up the wisdom of the Democratic primary voter. Kerry is leading Bush in several national polls, and observers like Charlie Cook are quickly fashioning the new conventional wisdom that weak job growth will throw Bush's reelection into doubt. Are we fated to having a new JFK in the White House in 2005? Is Kerry really electable?

Part of the answer to that question depends on George Bush's strengths, some of which are not apparent at the moment. Kerry faces a president who continues to have strong support on the issues of great importance to voters: terrorism and national security. Bush's lowest approval ratings have been around 50 percent, well above the range that usually spells defeat for an incumbent. Moreover, economic forecasts see strong growth in the fall and historically economic growth has been the most important factor determining the fate of a sitting president.

Kerry also has several weaknesses. His voting record in the Senate is very liberal in a time when even Democrats must appear conservative to win the presidency. Kerry's major weaknesses, however, have little to do with Bush, the economy, or his ideology. Kerry's major weaknesses are who he is and where he comes from.

Instead of looking at polls and at wishful thinking by pundits, we might examine who has actually been elected president in recent decades. Looked at that way, Kerry has little chance to win.

Going back to 1972, all presidents save one have been governors or former governors of states from the south and west. In other words, all the winners have been outsiders from rising regions of the nation. In contrast, John Kerry has been a U.S. senator from Massachusetts for 20 years. He is an insider from the northeast — the opposite of electable.

Long ago, experience in Washington was not fatal to presidential aspirations. In 1960, a senator from Massachusetts won the presidency. At about the same time, 73 percent of Americans told pollsters that they trusted the federal government to do what is right most of the time or about all the time. The American people mostly saw official Washington as a benevolent force that had defeated Hitler and fostered unexpected and unimaginable postwar prosperity.

Then came the 1960s: chaos in the streets; Vietnam abroad; economic decline; in time, Watergate and years of disaster overseen by three presidents who were consummate insiders. Public trust in the federal government went downhill steadily. By 1980, only 25 percent of Americans trusted the federal government.

Voters started to look for outsiders to "clean up the mess" in Washington. Jimmy Carter came first and made things worse. Ronald Reagan followed. To be sure, trust in the federal government has gone up some in recent years, but it is still not halfway back to its heights under John Kennedy. To the extent Kerry stands for Washington, he is in trouble.

Where he comes from also hurts. In 1960, the northeastern states (New England plus New York and New Jersey) accounted for 20 percent of all the eligible voters in the presidential contest. In 2000, those same states accounted for just 15 percent of eligible voters. This same decline in power can be seen in Congress. New York, for example, has lost a third of its congressional delegation since the 1960s. The northeast just does not matter as much as in the past.

But the Northeast did matter a lot for a long time. The region was home to capital markets, leading corporations, ancient universities, the television networks, the dominant newspaper, and much else. Now the northeast has to share power with the rest of the nation. The relative decline of that region bodes well for the nation. However, the memory of regional subordination in the south and west bodes ill for Kerry. Why should most Americans vote to have their lives run once again by smart know-it-alls from the northeast?

Kerry would have been electable, if it were 1960. But it is not 1960, as most Democrats must know. Indeed, some polls indicate most Kerry supporters do not expect him to win in November. His nomination is at once a gesture toward the past and a complaint about the present. It is not a serious effort to fashion a Democratic future.

— John Samples is director of the Center for Representative Government at the Cato Institute.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 2004; kerry
"Bush's lowest approval ratings have been around 50 percent, well above the range that usually spells defeat for an incumbent."

Does anyone have an example of this? I seem to recall Gray Davis having low approvals. Does anyone know of a incumbent LOSING with approvals at 50%?

1 posted on 03/11/2004 7:31:43 AM PST by KJacob
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To: KJacob
Kerry's major weaknesses are who he is and where he comes from.

To see just what these weakness's are you can start here. (Kerry's spooky closet and more)

2 posted on 03/11/2004 7:41:28 AM PST by yoe (The worse it is – the better it is!!)
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To: KJacob
In 1960, a senator from Massachusetts (barely) won the presidency.
3 posted on 03/11/2004 7:42:41 AM PST by capydick ("Think what your actions say to your soldiers.")
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To: KJacob
Kerry is electable outside of Ma?
4 posted on 03/11/2004 7:45:24 AM PST by Reagan79 (Pro Life! Pro Family! Pro Reagan!)
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To: KJacob
Well, don't compare apples and oranges. Statewide races don't quite compare to electoral races. Bush's approval ratings in the low 50s equal Clinton's, Reagan's and Nixon's - all of whom won re-election fairly easily.
5 posted on 03/11/2004 7:46:02 AM PST by Coop ("Hero" is the last four-letter word I'd use to describe John Kerry)
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To: capydick
some say the original JFK didn't win and that Nixon should have asked for a recount. In chicago.
6 posted on 03/11/2004 7:48:09 AM PST by cajungirl (John Kerry has no botox and I have a bridge to sell you!)
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To: yoe
Could John Kerry be elected? Entirely possible.

Should John Kerry be elected? Difficult for me to see what advantage that would provide to the US, but as a people, we are famous for cutting off noses to spite faces. Usually somebody else's nose and somebody else's face.
7 posted on 03/11/2004 7:49:17 AM PST by alloysteel
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To: KJacob; Coop
Bush's lowest approval ratings have been around 50 percent, well above the range that usually spells defeat for an incumbent.

That statement is mostly true (for Presidential elections), but it is also true that Bush's current approval ratings are a bit below the range that usually guarantees victory. Here are the average approval ratings in the re-elect year for recent Presidents:

Winners
Eisenhower '56: 72.0%
Johnson '64: 75.6%
Nixon '72: 55.4%
Reagan '84: 54.4%
Clinton '96: 54.1%

Losers
Ford '76: 46.9%
Carter '80: 42.1%
Bush '92: 39.4%

It looks like Bush is currently in sort of a no-man's land in between sure victory and sure defeat. Of course, it's early, too. At this point in 1980, President Carter had a 52% approval and 38% disapproval. Three months later, he was at 32% approve and 56% disapprove, and on his way to a landslide defeat.

Ford is another interesting case. His approval rating in 1976 never dipped all that far below 50%, and he averaged a net +7% on the approve/disapprove question throughout the year (and never going net negative) -- but he still lost in a close race.

Just based on the numbers, it looks like Bush is in a slightly better position than Ford was (which would mean another close race). But again, it's early, and there's still enough time for the dynamics to change.

8 posted on 03/11/2004 7:51:06 AM PST by BlackRazor
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To: BlackRazor
Good analysis.
9 posted on 03/11/2004 7:54:41 AM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: Coop
"Statewide races don't quite compare to electoral races."

Sure. My point is that in order to lose the position of incumbents needs to be lower than one would expect. I mentioned Gov. Davis just because his approvals were rather low and he still won.
10 posted on 03/11/2004 7:54:43 AM PST by KJacob
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To: KJacob
The polls cited by the main-stream media etc. are not reliable, they are instruments of the Clinton/DNC machine heavily slanted towards the left as propaganda. This is no different than during the Clinton years where all polls showed approval for the Clintons - and they were lies of cooked books, missing funds, a ravaged Education Department i.e., missing and unaccounted money, dumbed down defense and a credit card scandal to mention a few things - all reported through polls as being hunky-dory. That administration made the American citizen feel that the polls were telling the truth and Clinton wouldn't act without them.

President Bush does not rely on these erroneous findings...most of the foundations like The Pew Charitable Trust, Te-risa Heniz's foundations, NPR, CNNABCCBSNBC who are directing these polls just as they did before GW, will not poll a conservative or a conservative state... - do not be fooled by this propaganda. Kerry is a fool and even the Democrats know it – if they vote for him it will be at their peril and the Country’s peril.

11 posted on 03/11/2004 7:58:01 AM PST by yoe (The worse it is – the better it is!!)
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To: BlackRazor
Keep in mind Ford faced a strong primary challenge. Some fella from California, IIRC. :-) President Bush won't have that, and he'll have a ton of dough to spend. I anticipate his approval ratings will improve as 1) he starts to campaign, and 2) disgruntled conservatives truly face the reality of a President Kerry.

But even if his approval ratings flatline right here, I think he's in good shape. Only if they continue south, IMHO, is he really legitimately facing defeat.

On a side note, has anyone ever met a "gruntled" voter? Just wondering...

12 posted on 03/11/2004 8:01:47 AM PST by Coop ("Hero" is the last four-letter word I'd use to describe John Kerry)
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To: cajungirl
Right and, this fact skews events even more in the opposite direction of a John Kerry Presidency.
13 posted on 03/11/2004 8:13:54 AM PST by capydick ("Think what your actions say to your soldiers.")
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To: KJacob
We must all remember one thing. The election is over seven months away. That is not an eternity in politics; that is two eternities. Anything can happen. Kerry's weird wife could show up on stage at the Dem-o-rats convention in Boston stumbling drunk. Who knows? Peace out.
14 posted on 03/11/2004 8:33:07 AM PST by no dems
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