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A Kerry Landslide?
Washington Monthly ^ | 4/6/04 | Todd

Posted on 05/05/2004 5:46:10 AM PDT by pabianice

Why the next election won't be close.

Over the last year, most political TV shows handicapping the upcoming presidential election have repeated the refrain that the race will be extremely tight. Last month, CNN's astute commentator Jeff Greenfield hosted an entire segment on how easily this election could turn out like 2000, with President Bush and Sen. John Kerry splitting victories in the popular vote and the electoral college. Greenfield even threw out the possibility of an electoral college split of 269-269, brought about by a shift of just two swing states that went for Bush last time, New Hampshire, and West Virginia. He ended his feature with the conventional wisdom among Washington pundits: "We're assuming this election will stay incredibly close." Reporters covering the campaign echo this expectation, sprinkling their campaign dispatches with references to the "closely fought" electoral race and "tight election." The campaign staffs themselves have been saying for months that they anticipate that the race will go down to the wire. In late April, Republican party chairman Ed Gillespie told The New York Times that he expected a "very, very close" race. This winter, Democratic party chairman Terry McAuliffe urged Ralph Nader not to enter the race, fearing that the perpetual candidate could take precious votes away from Kerry in a race sure to be won by a hairline margin.

There are perfectly understandable reasons why we expect 2004 to be close. Everyone remembers the nail-biting 2000 recount. A vast number of books and magazine articles describe the degree to which we are a 50/50 nation and detail the precarious balance between red and blue states. And poll after poll show the two candidates oscillating within a few percentage points of one another. There are also institutional factors that drive the presumption that the race will be tight. The press wants to cover a competitive horse-race. And the last thing either campaign wants to do is give its supporters any reason to be complacent and stay home on election day.

But there's another possibility, one only now being floated by a few political operatives: 2004 could be a decisive victory for Kerry. The reason to think so is historical. Elections that feature a sitting president tend to be referendums on the incumbent--and in recent elections, the incumbent has either won or lost by large electoral margins. If you look at key indicators beyond the neck-and-neck support for the two candidates in the polls--such as high turnout in the early Democratic primaries and the likelihood of a high turnout in November--it seems improbable that Bush will win big. More likely, it's going to be Kerry in a rout.

Bush: the new Carter

In the last 25 years, there have been four elections which pitted an incumbent against a challenger--1980, 1984, 1992, and 1996. In all four, the victor won by a substantial margin in the electoral college. The circumstances of one election hold particular relevance for today: 1980. That year, the country was weathering both tough economic times (the era of "stagflation"--high inflation concurrent with a recession) and frightening foreign policy crises (the Iranian hostage crisis and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan). Indeed, this year Bush is looking unexpectedly like Carter. Though the two presidents differ substantially in personal style (one indecisive and immersed in details, the other resolute but disengaged), they are also curiously similar. Both are religious former Southern governors. Both initially won the presidency by tarring their opponents (Gerald Ford, Al Gore) with the shortcomings of their predecessors (Richard Nixon, Bill Clinton). Like Carter, Bush is vulnerable to being attacked as someone not up to the job of managing impending global crises.

Everyone expected the 1980 election to be very close. In fact, Reagan won with 50.8 percent of the popular vote to Carter's 41 percent (independent John Anderson won 6.6 percent)--which translated into an electoral avalanche of 489 to 49. The race was decided not so much on the public's nascent impressions of the challenger, but on their dissatisfaction with the incumbent.

Nor was Carter's sound defeat an aberration. Quite the opposite. Of the last five incumbent presidents booted from office--Bush I, Carter, Ford, Herbert Hoover, and William Howard Taft--only one was able to garner over 200 electoral votes, and three of these defeated incumbents didn't even cross the 100 electoral-vote threshold: --1992: 370 (Bill Clinton) to 168 (George H. W. Bush) --1980: 489 (Ronald Reagan) to 49 (Jimmy Carter) --1976: 297 (Jimmy Carter) to 240 (Gerald Ford) --1932: 472 (FDR) to 59 (Herbert Hoover) --1912: 435 (Woodrow Wilson) to 88 (TR) to 8 (Taft)

Poll sitting

Historically, when incumbents lose big, they do so for sound reasons: The public sees their policies as not working--or worse yet, as failures. That's certainly increasingly true of Bush today. From the chaos in Iraq to an uncomfortably soft economic recovery to the passage of an unpopular Medicare bill, the White House is having a harder and harder time putting a positive spin on the effects of the president's decisions.

And while Bush still retains a loyal base, he has provoked--both by his policies and his partisanship--an extremely strong reaction among Democrats. One indication is that turnout in this year's early Democratic primaries was way up. Nearly twice as many Democrats turned out for the 2004 Iowa caucuses as they had for those held in 2000. The turnout in New Hampshire for the Democratic primary was also extraordinarily high, up 29 percent from the previous turnout record set in 1992--the year Bush's father lost his reelection bid.

The Democrats' recent enthusiasm at the polls may in part be because this year's primary featured nine candidates, and Howard Dean's unusual campaign mobilized many new voters--both for and against him. However, the excitement in the Democratic race can't explain primary voter behavior on the other side of the aisle. Republican turnout in the New Hampshire primary was lower than in 2000, but that isn't surprising considering that Bush's nomination was never in question this year. A fairer way to gauge the eagerness of the president's base to rally behind him is to compare this GOP primary to the last one that featured an incumbent running for reelection with no real primary opposition: Bill Clinton in 1996. That year in New Hampshire, 76,874 Democrats cast ballots for Clinton. This year, 53,749 Republicans cast ballots for Bush. This is especially astonishing, considering that, in New Hampshire, there are more registered Republicans than Democrats.

The most obvious evidence cutting against the historical trend of elections featuring incumbents being won or lost by large margins is that opinion polls have consistently shown Bush and Kerry running neck and neck. But look carefully, and you'll find a couple of nuances in the most recent poll data that point to the potential for a big Kerry win. First, in polls that implicitly assume a higher turnout, Kerry performs better than he does in other polls. Most of the polls you hear about--and the ones that prognosticators trust the most--are surveys of "likely voters." Among the criteria pollsters typically use to identify likely voters is whether the subjects participated in the last election. These polls have proven more accurate in recent elections, like 2000, when voter turnout was relatively low--of the last nine presidential elections, only two showed lower turnout than 2000. But there are strong reasons to think that voters will turn out in larger numbers this year--especially among Democrats.

Four years ago, when the economy was strong, the country wasn't at war, and both presidential candidates ran as moderates, just 43 percent of adults told an early April Gallup poll that they had been thinking about the election "quite a lot." This April, when the issues seem much bigger and the differences between the candidates much starker, Gallup found that 61 percent of adults said they had been giving "quite a lot" of thought to the election.

So, presuming higher turnout, an arguably better predictor of election results would be polls of registered voters--both those who voted and those who stayed home in 2000. In an early April Gallup poll, Kerry trailed Bush 46 percent to 48 percent among likely voters, but led 48 percent to 46 percent among registered voters. Kerry's support had dropped incrementally in a late April Gallup poll, but he continued to garner higher support among registered voters than likely voters.

The second nuance to look at is what political consultant Chris Kofinis calls "the Bush bubble": the gap between the president's overall approval ratings and his approval ratings on specific policy areas. According to the most recent Washington Post/ABC News poll, Bush's approval rating now stands at 51 percent. That isn't bad, though it is noticeably below what the last two incumbents who won reelection had at this point in the election cycle: Reagan's approval was 54 percent and Clinton's was 56 percent. But even Bush's 51 percent may be softer than it looks. In the same poll, on seven of nine major policy issues--the economy, Iraq, Social Security, health insurance, taxes, jobs, the deficit--less than half of respondents said that they approved of the president's performance. In several cases, his approval was well below 50 percent. Only 45 percent approved of Bush's handling of Iraq; 44 percent of his performance on the economy; 34 percent of his performance on the deficit; and 33 percent of his stewardship of Social Security. Even on policy areas in which the president's approval is now relatively high--education and the war on terror--he is vulnerable to later substantive attacks by Kerry. For instance, he currently garners 51 percent approval on education, due largely to his role in passing a bold education measure; increasingly, however, educators and the public are alarmed about the effects of No Child Left Behind.

Kerry's challenge

Of course, the tight polling data does reflect a fundamental reality: For all the fallout from his policies, Bush still appeals to many Americans because of his seeming decisiveness, straight talk, and regular-guy charm--not qualities that John Kerry prominently displays. The historical pattern may strongly suggest that if Kerry wins, it will be by large margins--but that is hardly fated. It will only happen if Kerry successfully highlights Bush's failings while showing himself to be an appealing alternative. Otherwise, the senator could see himself losing an electoral rout, not winning in one. In fact, the second most likely outcome of this election is a Bush landslide. With just one exception, every president to win a second consecutive term has done so with a larger electoral margin than his initial victory. The least likely result this November is another close election.

Right now, the president is vulnerable. As The New Republic's Ryan Lizza argued in a recent New York Times editorial, undecided voters "know [the incumbent] well, and if they were going to vote for him, they would have already decided. Thus support for Mr. Bush should be seen more as a ceiling, while support for Mr. Kerry, the lesser-known challenger, is more like a floor."

That points to both an opportunity and a challenge for the Kerry campaign. Kerry needs to convince voters that he's up to the job--and that Bush isn't. If he can woo voters dissatisfied with Bush's policies, there's a potential--and historical precedent--for Kerry to win big.

Chuck Todd is the editor in chief of National Journal's Hotline.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; americaisdoomed
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To: VisualizeSmallerGovernment
Bush is Tarzan and Kerry is Jane?
81 posted on 05/05/2004 10:00:33 AM PDT by eyespysomething (The Barbarians are at the Gates. Don't give Kerry the key!)
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To: KJacob
By the way does Kerry have the charisma of Reagan?

Oh sure, he has that American morning optimism just oozing out of his pores.

< /sarcasm>

82 posted on 05/05/2004 10:02:38 AM PDT by eyespysomething (The Barbarians are at the Gates. Don't give Kerry the key!)
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To: watsonfellow
I think Rove is a horrible, horrible influence here.

Excellently put; a too-clever amateur(Rove) that is way over his head. Not wanting to take any flack for cutting spending while a "war" is ongoing, his advice now has us dealing with the reality of a weak dollar and a budget way whacked out of balance. Re-election.. then what? Yecch.

83 posted on 05/05/2004 10:11:01 AM PDT by Nonstatist
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To: VisualizeSmallerGovernment
or maybe, just maybe......bush is bush and kerry is kerry
84 posted on 05/05/2004 10:17:28 AM PDT by KOZ. (i'm so bad i should be in detention)
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To: pabianice
...he has provoked--both by his policies and his partisanship--an extremely strong reaction...

His partisanship? "HIS" partisanship?!?

What freaking planet is this guy living on?

85 posted on 05/05/2004 12:06:44 PM PDT by Choose Ye This Day ("He never talked vague, idealistic gas. When He said, 'Be perfect,' He meant it." -- C.S. Lewis)
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To: RJL
I saw the commercial last night, it had him saying something like that.
86 posted on 05/05/2004 2:24:41 PM PDT by ilgipper
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To: pabianice
ROFLMAO! Pulling this off would require the dems to use so much smoke that they would lose the support of the enviro wackos, and the mirrors they would have to use would deflect so much heat back at the sun that a melt down would ensue. On the sun that is, while the smoke threw the earth into an everlasting ice age.

The Dims just haven't created enough idiots to make this work, at this time.
87 posted on 05/05/2004 2:40:47 PM PDT by F.J. Mitchell (Even if he was alive, Ho Chi Min would still vote for Kerry,)
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To: pabianice
Anyone who is seriously comparing the economy today to that of 1980 obviously doesn't remember that period very well or never even lived through it. About the only similarity is that gasoline prices are really high right now; in every other respect the comparison is laughable on its face.
88 posted on 05/05/2004 2:43:11 PM PDT by jpl ("You can go to a restaurant in New York City and meet a foreign leader."- John Kerry)
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To: ilgipper; All
I think this guy is operating on a lot of willfully incorrect data. There wasn't historically high turnout in the Dem primary elections.

I will give the Kerry people this --they have the media in the tank for them, an iffy situation in Iraq, the S & M torture photos, lagging job creation, lots of shady anti-Bush whistleblowers, "the perceived Nam advantage", the myth that Cheney & Halliburton are profiterring, 54 electoral votes in CA and Blank many in NY that are basically slam dunks.

Not least of all, the Bush=Cheny re-elect operation doesn't seem to be that gtifted and it needs to be. I think Hughes, McClellan and Bartlett aren't pros--they are totally outmatched!
89 posted on 05/05/2004 2:49:13 PM PDT by faithincowboys
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To: Fintan
Now if our troops had done something like that to those prisoners in Iraq, I would agree with those calling the actions an atrosity. Even Saddam would never have done that to a living human being. Only someone who hates themselves for living, would voluntarily have that done to rhemselves.

One bullet in the head would be much more merciful and humane.
90 posted on 05/05/2004 2:50:45 PM PDT by F.J. Mitchell (Even if he was alive, Ho Chi Min would still vote for Kerry,)
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To: pabianice
More like an avalanche that he will attempt to ride all the way down on his snowboard.
91 posted on 05/05/2004 2:50:56 PM PDT by RightWhale (Destroy the dark; restore the light)
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To: battlecry
I'm sorry; it was over the top.

The Pope MIGHT convert to Islam, and I suppose the Zionists are responsible in Saudi Arabia. I shouldn't have linked those highly unlikely events with the clearly ridiculous idea that the Red Sox could actually win the Serious.
92 posted on 05/05/2004 3:05:45 PM PDT by You Dirty Rats (WE WILL WIN WITH W - Isara)
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To: pabianice
"What happens when you spend 8 years in college smoking dope."


I wouldnt write this off so quickly. He makes soem good points such as Bush's poor poll numbers but also he reaches by comparing Bush to Carter and 2004's economy to that of 1980
93 posted on 05/05/2004 3:15:05 PM PDT by boxsmith13
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To: Fintan
Good Lord, Fintan, that is the ugliest thing I have seen in many a year. Whatever it is, it's a perfect representative of the Left's secular, nihilist, "if it feels good, do it" creed. The thing must live off the state, because it can't have a job unless it: (a) lives in San Francisco, or (b) is in some kind of circus.

One thing's for certain: If the jihidists win the war, this sort of exhibitionism will go the way of the dinosaur.

94 posted on 05/05/2004 3:19:05 PM PDT by Wolfstar (Our place in this war? On the political front lines, as our Armed Forces fight on the battle lines.)
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To: Bonaventure
biggest problem for Bush is that he cant even get the 48.5% he got in 2000 must less 50%

But Carter essentially quit the race in the early fall even refusing to debate Reagan in the first debate. Bush wont do that.

Kerry may win but not by 10% and 400EVs
95 posted on 05/05/2004 3:19:22 PM PDT by boxsmith13
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To: arthurus
"There is one superficially valid comparison of Carter to W. Both will have presided over strongly inflationary economies."

not really true. We were worried about deflation till about one year ago. CPI should begin to increase but it wont be as bad as the 1970s because the global economy is structured much differently than in 1979
96 posted on 05/05/2004 3:24:40 PM PDT by boxsmith13
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To: boxsmith13
The marker for the beginning of the inflation was the rise in the price of gold. Prices have heretofore not advanced much because the money was all going overseas. We called it the balance of payments deficit. Well it is catching up now in our own economy. Bush turned the boat around tosail with the already reversed current when he "devaluated" the dollar, i/e. pushed massive amounts of dollars into the economy. In an er of floating exchange rates a devaluation can occur only by rapidly inflating. The rise in prices is NOT inflation. It is a pretty much inevitible result of inflation but is not always coterminous. Price rises were also less apparent than they could be because American industry went through a long period of reducing real costs even as their prices did not rise so they made more dollars for the same output/same prices. In noninflationary times those prices would have fallen. Commodity prices have been rising for a couple of years. I suspect that the perceived effects will be severe a few months after the election and will cost the Republicans the Congress and the presidency in 08 but could start to be really annoying by September of this year. Watch for big strikes and labor unrest. That is the signal that the inflation is hurting and is the cue to the people that the Democrats Are Right. Another factor that may be in W's favor is that the economy is improving and wages are rising as employers seek more workers. In a stagnant inflationary economy prices go up and wages lag quite a bit.
97 posted on 05/05/2004 6:38:58 PM PDT by arthurus
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To: arthurus
"Watch for big strikes and labor unrest"


I dont agree with everything youve written but I do agree with this part. One reason hours lost to strikes declined so much in the 1980s and 1990s was the reduction in inflation. The 1970s saw a huge number of hours lost due to strikes and it was the result of rising inflation...good call
98 posted on 05/05/2004 7:16:44 PM PDT by boxsmith13
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To: boxsmith13
The strikes happen because the value that the workers are receiving is declining in an inflation-it gets harder and harder to pay one's bills as the value of the dollars declines. In a deflation there are no wage strikes because, even as one's pay does not rise in dollars, those dollars buy more so there is de facto pay raise.

When an inflation gets under weigh it is a while before the de facto decline in the wage causes strikes.There have been no such strikes in the last couple of years because the existing inflation has been going offshore and other economies have seen the price level rise while our pols have thought they have made the magic tweak by flooding the market with dollars at just the right time in just the right amount.Keynesians are like that but it didn't happen. Gold started up immediately and commodities followed 1 to 2 quarters later, then consumer prices elsewhere. The continuing efficiciency increases in American industry masked the early portions of the rise by lowering some real prices even as nominal prices stayed steady.

I am not yet quite convinced that this inflation which was gently begun in Clinton's last year and pushed with vigor by the Bush FED is for the classic reasons,i.e. to default on part of the Debt unless in anticipation of large deficits.

Inflation is always deliberate on the part of the government, even if for different superficial reasons, like "boosting the economy" and it is always to reduce the debt of the ruler. It was true with the Roman Emporers who did it by reducing the precious metal content in the coinage in order to be able to make more solidii with the same amount of gold and thus to retain more gold to pay off the emperors' debt.It has been true of every system of paper money and is easier. Unlike with gold, the paper supply is pretty much inexhaustible.

One superficial upside to this inflation is that it is, indeed, reducing the real debt. The reduction in real money debt will have been maybe 35% as indicated by the 60% rise in gold. That is, in fact, default. That's great for the government but bad for the economy because creditors are receiving reduced values for their loans and many lose money on the deal making loan money more difficult to obtain, i.e., interest rates go up. That is happening and gives people with mortgages a last chance right now to get in on the scam by converting their ARMs to fixed rate, thereby repaying the loans with ever smaller dollars

99 posted on 05/06/2004 4:46:29 AM PDT by arthurus
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To: KJacob
So Bush's approval needs to drop a mere 16%? I understand the comparison now.

It could happen. When approval ratings fall, they tend to fall fast. Carter himself had 52/38 approve/disapprove numbers in early March 1980. Just four weeks later he was at 39/51, and he never recovered. Still, the author's comparison of the economic conditions is deeply flawed. If Bush's popularity craters and he loses this election, it will be because of Iraq, not the economy.

100 posted on 05/06/2004 4:50:43 AM PDT by BlackRazor
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