Posted on 08/08/2012 1:37:18 PM PDT by neverdem
The conventional wisdom in the presidential race is that President Obama is a clear favorite. We hear this from the pundits in the press, we see it in the InTrade odds, and various predictive models built around the polling averages tell us this.
But I disagree.
For starters, I believe it is based upon a historically naïve view of summer political polling. Yes, Obama enjoys a modest lead in the nationwide vote, as well in the swing states, but consider the bounciness of the polling in 1968, 1976, 1980, 1988, 1992, and 2000. It is not hard to see that political polling before and after the conventions looks different in ways that endure beyond the traditional convention bounces.
There is another problem with the received wisdom, which is that it is built on the assumption that all voters are equally persuadable. They are not, which is why President Obamas three-point margin over Mitt Romney needs to be understood in the context of where he actually is in those polls.
For the last two months, President Obama has bounced around between 46 and 48 percent of the vote in the national polls, as well as most averages of the state polls. Impressive? Hardly. Forty-six to 48 percent is really just the core Democratic coalition, which every Democrat has held for the past quarter century.
The old Democratic party broke down in 1968, the start of a long presidential exile. The party managed only one victory out of the next six; worse, it saw the collapse of its traditional New Deal coalition built on the Solid South, the white working class in and around the big Northern cities, and farmers/ranchers in the West. Slowly but surely, the party rebuilt itself into the coalition we know today dominated by racial and ethnic minorities, upscale white liberals (especially activist groups like the environmentalists and feminists), government workers, and young voters. It was in the 1988 election that we saw the party coming back from the brink, and every cycle since then the Democrats have enjoyed a floor of about 46 percent of the vote, built around roughly 90 percent of Democratic support, 40 percent of independent support, and 10 percent of Republican support.
If you look carefully at the national horserace polls, you will notice that these are the only people supporting Obama over Romney, more or less. And if you look carefully at the presidential job approval polls, you will notice that these are also the only people approving of his job performance, more or less.
In other words, Obamas polling right now suggests that he has only locked down the core Democratic vote; what's more, those not currently in his voting coalition tend to disapprove of his job as president. Indeed, the Gallup job approval poll finds him with just 31 percent support from pure independents, i.e. those with no party affiliation whatsoever.
It is extraordinarily difficult for incumbent presidents to win the votes of people who disapprove of the job they are doing. Hence, this race is Romneys to win.
But it is not his to lose. And that's an important distinction.
It is difficult to overcome the hurdle that Obama faces to win voters who think youve done a bad job as president but not impossible. Richard Nixon in 1972 won a significant chunk of his disapprovers because the McGovern-Shriver ticket was not a serious option. Lyndon Johnson managed the same in 1964, as he made the Goldwater-Miller ticket out to be a threat to humanity itself.
The 1964 election is particularly important to understanding the 2012 campaign. I have argued in the past that, bereft of popular legislative achievements, a sound economy, or a manageable deficit, President Obama is left running a version of LBJs 1964 campaign. Johnson was worried that passage of the Civil Rights Act would spark a backlash that would keep him from his goal of the largest victory in history. Hence, the frontlash strategy, designed to make typically Republican voters (mostly moderates in the Northeast) scared to death of Goldwater. The stakes are too high, LBJ warned the country in ad after ad.
Obama is basically running this campaign. If LBJ made Goldwater a threat to western civilization, Obama is trying to make Romney into a corporate raider who will bring about a new feudalism.
This points to Romneys challenge, and it is a significant one. Obviously, he needs to remind swing voters of all the things about the Obama tenure that they do not like, but he also must counter Obama's negative campaign. He cannot allow himself to be tagged as a capitalist pig whose only goal is personal enrichment. Instead, he must aggressively and constantly push the idea that he is a decent, public-spirited man whose background is precisely what this country needs.
This is why a bold vice presidential selection is a good start. A vibrant, articulate conservative who can make the positive case for a change would be an important signal that Team Romney understands it is not enough to get the country to say no to Obama, but also say yes to Romney. Beyond that, while the Tampa convention should toss out plenty of red meat to conservatives, it must dedicate much more effort to promoting Romney as the best leader to fix our problems. Similarly, during the ad wars and the fall debates, Romney must not focus singularly on the case against Obama the president has made that himself over three years of bad governance but dedicate substantial effort to making the case for himself.
By Election Day, there will be two stories about Mitt Romney. The one, which we have already heard from Team Obama, portrays Romney as a heartless capitalist. The other is a case still to be made, from Team Romney, that he is a pragmatic problem solver who understands the private economy and can fix it.
If a majority of voters think that Romneys story is closer to the truth than Obamas, then Mitt Romney will be elected the 45th President of the United States.
Jay Cost is a staff writer for THE WEEKLY STANDARD and the author of Spoiled Rotten: How the Politics of Patronage Corrupted the Once Noble Democratic Party and Now Threatens the American Republic, available now wherever books are sold.
An interesting article, but he could lose by running a stupid, overly timid campaign against the usurper.”
That is the point of the article.
If Romney runs a good campaign, there is no way he would lose, no matter what Obama tries.
Alas, Obama is running the dirtiest sleaziest slandering slash-and-burn attack campaign ever, and Romney is doing the ‘safe’ squishy dont-rock-the-boat campaign that doesnt match Obama’s attacks.
Romney has to step up his game, outline his vision (and make it reaganesque), call out Obama on his lies, and defend his honor.
“So you would be happy with two more Justices like Sotomayor and Kagan? Romney governed like a liberal in MA. We don’t know how he will govern in the White House.”
He will govern as he always has....from the left. He didn’t govern from the left because he was in a left state...he governed as he believed. You are foolish in the extreme if you think otherwise.
Romney will be no better than Obama on SCOTUS picks. However, the GOP member of the Senate will be bound by “party loyalty” to support his liberal picks....regardless of the lies he is telling now to sooth the naive.
“...what makes you think he would be impeached? He has already disregarded the constitution several times and what has happened?”
We don’t currently have the votes in the Senate to convict him, even IF the House impeaches. IF we get a Senate majority of conservatives, then impeachment by the House and conviction in the Senate become more probable.
While I agree that the country will have serious harm from 4 more years of the Obamination....Romney could potentially be worse...but won’t have the GOP to keep him in check (that dreaded “party loyalty”).
Also, Romney has been a liberal his entire life. What would lead any reasonable person to believe he is going to pick “conservative” members to the SCOTUS? HE IS LYING. Plus, because of “party loyalty” the GOP members of the Senate will not turn down his appointments. However, in the next four years (if Obama wins reelection and the Senate goes conservative) the GOP members of the Senate can be seriously pressured to block Obama SCOTUS appointments.
Romney is a non-solution...Romney is part of the problem...just as Obama.
I’m afraid you need to seek the help if you think that the first black president...re-elected with a personal mandate...is going to be impeached (let alone convicted) for anything. Congress will cower before him, he will be socially and politically unassailable. He will not govern, he will rule. He can be re-elected with the worst economy in more than 80 years and you think anyone will have the courage to impeach him?
I’m not the one that needs help here. A nation that re-elects Obama is lost.
“You are also forgetting that the Tea Party will not allow the GOP to spend like drunken sailors like they did under W. They will insist that Romney is serious about the economy and the ridiculous size of government.”
Sorry, but unfortunately you are wrong. Not all “conservatives” in the GOP are of the Tea Party variety on fiscal issues - they are still a minority. If Romney wants something, he will get it. Also, don’t be surprised to see “Tea Party” types defer to “party loyalty” after they get pushed a bit.
When was the last time a sitting President lost a primary?
Romney and the Republican establishment know people like you are blowing smoke. If you'll vote for someone with Romney's record in a Presidential election, you'll always vote Republican. They can manipulate you into voting for their candidate every time. This why the country keeps moving to the left.
If Romney wins, Scalia retires and a more liberal judge will replace him. Kennedy will also retire and it is possible a judge more liberal will replace him as well.
So, if Romney lies well enough that will satisfy you?
Then, we can have a civil war and really take the country back!
Enough with the paranoid nonsense.
Baloney.
Romney will do fine. Stop pretending.
What do you base that claim on? Certainly not his record.
He gets in and is a disaster, people like you need to be held accountable.
If Palin is VP it will not be a disaster.
If Palin is not VP, starting November 7th I’m working full-time for Mitten’s replacement in 2016.
Either way things will be a lot better for four years because Obama will have been defeated.
The tinfoil hat you wear must be pretty big.
Just to set the record straight, Bambi and this administration have been the ones who have "manipulated" my vote. Every week they have done something to destroy everything I love, and they have, by word and action, proved themselves the most destructive, anti-everything good and right that we here claim to love, and somehow that seems to have escaped you.
Stuck on stupid is too nice a comment for you and your ilk.
That is a possibility. But not as bad as the probabilities we will face if Zero is re-elected. Getting rid of Holder is reason enough to vote for Romney, IMHO. People here want Obama investigated and Holder investigated, we can’t let them investigate themselves.If Obama wins another term he will think the people have given communism a green light in this nation. I just cannot fathom him having 4 years basically free reign in our country.
If we step on a nail or two getting out of a burning house, then so be it.
What Holder and Obama did in Fast & Furious is the worst scandal in history of America,IMHO. And they might get away with it.
Anyone who says that Mitt Romney is the greater of two evils is not just paranoid but idiotic as well.
What do you do in your spare time? Play Russian Roulette with five chambers full?
He is the greater of two evils because he'll be able to twist the arms of RINOs to pass "bipartisan" legislation Obama could only dream of getting passed...VAT tax, increased taxes on the rich, amnesty, climate change legislation, etc.
Romney, in case you weren't paying attention, is the father of gay marriage and provided the blueprint for Obamacare.
He gets in and fails, people like YOU will be accountable for doing so.
You get to take accountability if Obama gets re-elected and succeeds. Whether you like it or not.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.