Posted on 11/07/2006 3:23:51 AM PST by 11th_VA
WASHINGTON As Republican strategists make last-minute preparations for Election Day, checking voter lists and calling supporters, they might want to consider an unorthodox tactic: a rain dance.
A new study of voter behavior confirms something political operatives have long suspected: rain hurts Democrats and helps Republicans. The study found that 1 inch of rain reduces overall turnout by slightly less than 1 percent and cuts the Democratic vote by 2.5 percentage points.
Rain does have a significant effect decreasing the Democratic vote share, said Brad Gomez, a visiting professor of political science at the University of Georgia who co-authored the study. Thats a fairly sizeable swing.
By analyzing weather and voting data since 1948, Gomez and his colleagues, Thomas Hansford and George Krause, calculated how many voters stayed home because of rain and snow.
During the especially rainy 1992 election, 666,000 voters stayed home, but Democrat Bill Clinton won the presidency by such a large margin that it did not affect the outcome. By contrast, weather had virtually no effect on turnout in 1952 and 1980.
The more it rains, the more people stay home, the researchers found. But snow has a lower impact. One inch of snow reduces turnout by slightly less than 0.5 percent.
They determined that a few storms in the right locations could have changed the outcome of the 1960 presidential election. If there had been storms in the Northeast and the Midwest, Richard Nixon would have won instead of John Kennedy.
Their study, The Republicans Should Pray for Rain: Weather Turnout and Voting in U.S. Presidential Elections, will appear in the Journal of Politics next year.
Campaign strategists have long believed that bad weather deterred Democratic voters more than Republicans. But until now, they didnt know how much.
Why are Democrats affected more? Political operatives believe its a matter of demographics. Democratic voters tend to be poorer than Republicans and may not have cars to drive to the polls. Those voters, the theory goes, would be more likely to stay home in bad weather.
Another explanation is that Democrats are more likely to be what political scientists call peripheral voters, people casually interested in politics who dont feel compelled to vote in every election.
Their decision about voting is more likely to be influenced by outside factors such as rain.
Gomez was inspired to conduct the study after watching Today Show weatherman Al Roker predict that stormy weather would have an impact on turnout. He wondered how Roker could make such a claim.
Gomez and his colleagues compiled voting data and weather reports for more than 3,000 U.S. counties for presidential elections from 1948 to 2000. Using a sophisticated analysis of precipitation, historical turnout and factors that affect voting, they calculated how much the turnout was influenced by rain or snow.
To compensate for voters accustomed to rainy or snowy weather in their hometowns (they theorized that residents in soggy Seattle would cope with rain better than people in a dry city such as Phoenix), the researchers factored in normal precipitation for election day.
They studied only presidential elections, so its not clear how well the results apply to a mid term election like the one Tuesday. The impact of weather could be different because midterm elections draw fewer peripheral voters.
Democratic strategists acknowledge that their party is more affected by bad weather but say they boost their turnout efforts by giving out rain ponchos or adding more vans to give voters a ride to the polls.
The partys biggest weather fanatic is Donna Brazile, the manager of Al Gores 2000 presidential campaign. With the election just three days away, Brazile has been watching the Weather Channel and checking Web sites to see where the storms will be.
Other Democratic operatives simply look at the forecasts, but Brazile analyzes the jet stream and tracks storm systems hundreds of miles away.
Friday night, she was hopeful because of a high pressure system over the Ohio Valley. She said it would keep storms away from important states such as Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
I would say right now the weather forecast favors Democrats.
Washington bureau chief Bill Adair can be reached at adair@sptimes.com or (202) 463-0575.
Steady rain in DC and Baltimore now - Moving to Philly !!!
hip hip hurray!! bring on the rain!
It's raining big time in Atlanta today. My polling place(in a mostly Rep. district) was very crowded this afternoon.
i just got an email from the King County Republicans with the following ("write your votes on a peice of paper and mail them in" - I hope it doesn't turn into a fiasco!):
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If you happen to be in an area that is completely cut off from the outside world such as a home right in the bottom of a river valley, surrounded by water and unable to reach ANY polling place, then King County has informed us that they will be accepting late Flood Ballots. You should call 206-296-VOTE for instructions, but essentially they will ask you to write out your votes on a piece of paper (or go to the county web site for a list of all the races you can vote on, print it out, and clearly mark it), put it in an envelope, put that envelope inside another envelope, write the explanation of why youre voting late on the outer envelope, and mail it as early as possible but WITHIN 7 DAYS. The ballot will be treated as a provisional challenged ballot, and will go before the canvassing board before being duplicated onto a real ballot and counted. Such Flood Ballots will only be accepted from people who can prove that they were physically cut off and unable to get to their polling place, so if you can get to ANY polling place and vote a provisional ballot, that would be preferred and help insure that your vote is counted.
Please pass along this information to anyone you know who wants to vote but is concerned about being unable to do so. Thanks!
I heard it on the radio a little while ago on my way home. Sounds like it could be a mess!
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