Posted on 11/24/2012 9:28:37 AM PST by SeekAndFind
In the new issue of the Weekly Standard Jay Cost undertakes a retrospective on what happened in the election just passed. Cost detects a mystery. Its the case of the missing voters:
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In 2008, some 131.5 million Americans went to the polls; while the votes are still being tallied, this time around there probably were between 127 and 130 million votes cast. Most of the decline came from white voters; in fact, between 6 and 9 million white voters went missing this year, relative to 2008. It is a reasonable guess that the number of white votes in 2004 roughly equaled the number in 2012, despite the fact that millions of new whites have become eligible to vote and the aging white population has entered peak voting years.
Much has been made of the increasing whiteness of the GOP coalition, with the implication being that Mitt Romney lost because he failed to attract enough support from ethnic or racial minorities. Without doubt, this was a problem for the GOP nominee and certainly made a difference in key swing states. In Colorado and Florida, Romneys support among Hispanics was lower than that of George W. Bush and even John McCain.
But Romneys problems were much bigger than this, as he failed to pull enough white voters into his coalition to win. In Colorado, Florida, and Ohio, Romney improved on McCains share of white voters, but these states saw notable declines in white turnout. Meanwhile, in Iowa and Virginiawhere white turnout was roughly constantRomney failed to match the levels that Bush pulled when he won both states.
This suggests that the identity politics explanation is insufficient to explain Romneys electoral problem. It was not merely a failure to attract Hispanics and, to a lesser extent, African Americans into the GOP coalition (preliminary data actually suggest that Barack Obama won fewer African Americans in 2012 than he did in 2008). There seems to have been an overall hesitation among many types of voterswhite or notabout entering the GOP coalition. It looks as though many backed Obama over Romney, and many more simply chose not to vote.
An examination of the exit poll makes it easy to see why. Obamas campaign against Romney, which portrayed him as an out-of-touch plutocrat, appears largely to have been successful. Romneys favorable rating in the exit poll was just 47 percent, with 50 percent holding an unfavorable view. By 53 to 43 percent, voters said that Obama was more in touch with people like them, and by a staggering 53 percent to 34 percent, they said Romneys policies would favor the rich instead of the middle class.
In other words, Romney lost in large part because of a yawning empathy gap. Typically, this plagues Republican candidates to some degree, even victorious ones, but it was pronounced this year, and appears to have been determinative. The voters who showed up on Election Day identified more closely with Obama than Romney, and those who stayed home presumably identified with neither. Importantly, this problem transcended age, race, ethnicity, and gender. Compared with Bush in 2004, Romney simply failed to connect with people.
What of the Democratic performance? There is little for the left to celebrate here beyond the fact that their candidate won a second term in the Oval Office. After all, President Obama won fewer popular votes, a smaller share of the popular vote, and a smaller share of the Electoral College. The last president to be reelected with such a diminished coalition was Franklin Roosevelt in his third and fourth terms. No president in American history but Barack Obama has ever entered a second full term with his coalition diminished across the board.
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Costs analysis suggests to me the devastating effect of the Obama campaigns personal attacks on Romney during the months after Romney sewed up the GOP nomination. The Obama campaign turned Romney into dead man walking.
The Romney campaign had no funds to respond to those attacks. Prior to the convention, Romney was prevented by law from accessing the funds he had raised for the general campaign. After the convention, Romney had plenty of money, but many voters had tuned him out. Why didnt Romney self-fund a response to the merciless attacks he was sustaining from the Obama campaign in the battleground states prior to the GOP convention? That is a mystery for another day.
Cost offers this to unravel the case of the missing voters: Voters did not trust Obama to handle the tough issues, but even less did they trust Romney to represent them in the Oval Office. Looking ahead, he sees both hazard and opportunity: It is not hard to see how the nations deep disgruntlement could produce a major upheaval in two or four years time.
FOOTNOTE: For a good companion to Costs retrospective, see John Podhoretzs Commentary essay The way forward, while Pat Caddell offered a variety of related thoughts in his post-election analysis at David Horowitizs Restoration Weekend earlier this month. And Michael Barone is wrestling with the case of the missing voters as well.
JOHN adds a couple of thoughts: First, Romneys tactical error went beyond not using his own funds pre-convention. Money that was raised after Romney had the nomination sewed up could nevertheless have been designated for the primary phase of the campaign, but the Romney campaign believed that money spent during the summer is basically wasted, since undecided voters dont make up their minds until October. The two campaigns followed opposite strategies here, and it seems that the Romney camp was proven wrong.
Second, I fear that Republicans are making a serious mistake if we blame the elections outcome on Romneys failure to connect with voters. Obviously that happened to some degree, but the real question is, why? The most alarming statistic quoted by Jay Cost is that, by a wide margin, voters believed Romneys policies would benefit the rich and not the middle classthis despite the fact that Obamas policies had already proven to be a disaster for the middle class. I am afraid that this demonstrates, not just a lack of support for Romney, but a lack of support for free enterprise.
Despite all of the nonsense that surrounded the campaign, I think nearly all voters understood that Romneys policies favored smaller, less intrusive government and more reliance on free enterprise, while Obama stood for more government. A generation ago, the idea that free enterprise only benefits the rich would have been regarded as ridiculous in the light of history. Today, I fear that a great many Americans believe that free enterprise only favors the rich, or something close to that proposition. This is reflected in the survey done a few months ago that suggested young people have a more favorable view of socialism than capitalism.
When Ronald Reagan said that in the present crisis, government isnt the solution, government is the problem, he was appealing to something that most Americans already believed. I am concerned that the bedrock belief in free enterprise that was taken for granted in our youth may now be mostly gone. It is not hard to see why that might be the case, since all of the organs of our culture, from the public schools to the television networks to the comedy industry to Hollywood to higher education to the womens magazines have been diligently working to undermine faith in economic freedom for several decades now. I fear that what failed to connect with voters in 2012with enough voters, anywaywas not Mitt Romney the man, but rather free enterprise, the philosophy. There is no way conservatives can undo the baleful effects of our culture on political assumptions in the course of a presidential campaign, no matter how eloquent our candidate may be. And, of course, the problem is compounded by the fact that increasing numbers of Americans live outside the free economy, either as public employees or as dependents on government benefits.
They all neglect the possibility that many people don’t vote because they believe their vote will be cancelled by fraud.
The President had asssets in the Cayman Islands as well. They both paid legal taxes on them, so what?
He was a company rebuilder, not only some venture capitalist.
He also laid out the truth of the future if Obama was to stay in. He very well expressed his view for what he wanted to do and the future.
No, the worst President didn’t lose because the electorate was mostly bought and paid for on his side.
Romney/Ryan and many down ticket candidates lost because of vast amounts of voter fraud. Pure and simple.
Noting will make me believe otherwise. And talking about anything else when it comes to the election results is EXACTLY what the leftists want us to do.
If we on the right do nothing to stop the fraud, we will have less REAL voters turn up for elections because they know their votes don’t matter one iota.
Nothing done about the voter fraud will equal the communists have taken over our Country.
Jumping for joy? Don’t think so.
Neither do I. I figure it has to be a governor. But we can’t have the conservative primary internecine warfare we saw in the 2012 season.
You'd be wrong. When did Mitt ever indicated that he would give us smaller government?
2008 was an election that we couldn’t win.
2012, was an election that we couldn’t lose.
What a losers mentality, when we were running against Jimmy Carter and a near depression this time, versus history, Bush fatigue, war fatigue, recession, and the first black president last time.
You are spamming the threads with with the idea that Romney exceeded the 2008 vote, as proof that he was an improvement, a good candidate, the man was a losing disaster, as he came up short of millions of votes.
Equal to 2008 translates as DISASTER, the 2012 ticket should have vastly exceeded 2008.
I did not make the comments as proof that Romney was an improvement.
I'm making the point that turnout was not DOWN as had been reported. It's not about the candidate. It's about voters.
Don't twist stuff.
I'm refuting your ridiculous point, it was obviously the candidate, that is why in two reverse image elections, Romney only equaled 2008, instead of surpassing it by millions.
By the way, it wasn't "about voters", it was about Mitt Romney, you can't blame the potential customers, the market place, for your lack of a product.
It was about the voters that DID turn out.
Huh? Turn-out WAS down in 2012, Romney only equaled 2008 against a weakened Jimmy Carter, I corrected you by pointing out that it WAS the candidate.
And pointed out to you that it wasn’t “about voters”, it was about Mitt Romney, you can’t blame the potential customers, the market place, for your lack of a product.
The best way to avoid conservative internecine warfare in the primaries is to have a better candidate than we had in 2012. Santorum, Newt, Perry, Bachman...they were all flawed.
Governor sounds right. It would be a struggle to vote for somebody in Washington; our politics are increasingly defined by Washington vs the rest of us. Scott Walker? Policies are right. He's got backbone.
There's plenty of time yet to round out the field. We'd be better off this time if there were four RINO candidates and only one conservative...
Maybe Jean will be willing to let the nation have Scott Walker come 2016 - she busted her hump for him in three election cycles (primary, general, recall). I agree he is a leading contender in the GOP backbone department (a shallow bench if there ever was one).
I don’t know about that dirtboy. We let the GOP try out Paul Ryan (my congressman) and he was rejected, even by our state in the general. Let us keep Scott Walker for a little longer, I’m not sure that conservatives can ever win nationally again.
Who's blaming anyone? I'm pointing out a statistic.
BTW, say hi to my longest-standing FReeper buddy okie01, a man of infinite political and communications wisdom.
Your posts are getting vague and difficult to make out. Would you be specific with what you are disagreeing about or trying to say?
Is it about the votes that Romney failed to get?
Roughly the same number 59m, and 59m as McCain in 2008, meaning that in 2012, Romney left millions on the table against Carter the II.
2008 was an election that we couldn’t win.
2012, was an election that we couldn’t lose.
You guys cannot deny that the GOP made no gains in voters between the two elections, that they were roughly equal in persuading voters to vote republican, except against two COMPLETELY different versions of Obama, two totally different eras.
What a disaster Romney was, we were running against Jimmy Carter and a near depression this time, versus history, Bush fatigue, war fatigue, recession, and the first black president last time.
Run out of those Black's Barbecue sausages from Lockhart, TX, again, huh?
http://www.blacksbbq.com/
Actually, I still have a decent amount of Berdoll pecans from my October visit to Texas. The Salt Lick BBQ was good, but not exceptional.
And I fergot to mention, your equisite Texas culinary wisdom as well (I do get to visit my Texan parents and make up for being in the culturally-deprived Northeast).
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