Follow the Bouncing PollsToday I hear much gnashing of teeth and cries
of woe from the left -- and screams of savage
triumph from the right -- because of a new
Gallup poll showing Bush allegedly "surging"
against Kerry -- despite (or perhaps even
because of) the Richard Clarke media frenzy.I suggest everyone pop a few Vitamin B-
complex stress tabs and calm down. There is
much, much less to this than meets the eye.The last Gallup poll was conducted almost a
month ago -- when Kerry was still riding the
wave of (relatively) favorable publicity that
carried him through the primaries, and Bush
had not yet cranked up the GOP's multi-million
dollar advertising death star. That survey
showed Kerry with a 5-point lead over Bush
among registered voters, which even then was
on the high side of the polling universe.Since that time, it's become amply clear the
race has narrowed to something close to a
statistical tie. It's just that Gallup is now catching
up with the parade. I've also noticed in the past
that Gallup numbers tend to be a bit more
volatile than most of the major national polls,
and I suspect that's the case here as well. And indeed, we have the Pew Center calling the
race essentially dead even -- Kerry 47%, Bush
46% -- even though the Republican money blitz
is clearly taking a toll on Kerry's favorable/
unfavorable rating, and the edge he has
enjoyed on some key issues: Earlier this month, voters trusted Kerry more
than Bush to improve the job situation and
health care systems by margins of roughly two-
to-one. Today, these margins are much tighter,
as the percent expressing confidence in Kerry
has declined. In mid-March, 53% cited Kerry as better able to
improve economic conditions, today 44% favor
Kerry in this area. The percentage citing Bush
has remained relatively stable, while the
proportion saying they don't know who would be
better has increased.Some erosion in Kerry's standing was
inevitable, given the waning of the "primary
effect," and the kind of money the BC (Bush-
Cheney, or Before Christ, take your pick) crew
has been able to throw onto the airwaves. Our
paleolithic opponents are leaning hard on
some buttons that are wired deep into the
brains of many voters -- especially those whose
world views were formed in the Reagan years: One of the more striking findings in the new
[Gallup] poll is the increased public perception
that Kerry is "too liberal." Four in 10 Americans
(41%) now take this view, up from 29% in late
January. At the same time, the percentage
saying Kerry's views are "about right" has
dropped from 46% to 37%.And yet, all this Pavlovian stimuation has only
brought Bush roughly even with Kerry on the
ideological seesaw:Americans are generally split between viewing
Bush as too conservative (38%) and about right
(40%), while 15% consider him too liberal.(You have to wonder about that 15% who think
Shrub is too liberal. Is the militia movement
really that big??) But the real question isn't whether Kerry has
been damaged, but how serious is the
damage, and how long will it last? And on those
scores, I see some hopeful signs in the Pew
survey. It appears that so far, at least, ush's
spring offensive has only succeeded in driving
voters back into the undecided camp. But he
has not (at least as yet) managed to rally them
to his side:In fact, on a wide range of issues, from
terrorism to the economy to health care, a
growing number of voters are saying that they
do not know which candidate would do a better
job, or that neither is clearly preferable.Bush is the incumbent. People know him. So
Bush's political brain trust (well, "trust" in the
Enron sense of the word) understands that the
longer voters remain in the undecided column,
the more likely they are to favor the challenger in
the end -- unless they're given a strong reason
to lay aside their original doubts, the ones that
drove them away from the incumbent in the first
place. Right now, it doesn't look like Bush has given
them those reasons. He's stopped the
bleeding, but he still hasn't stitched up the
wound. What's more, the Pew Survey also shows
Clarke's attacks have had a significant political
impact on independent voters -- and, in keeping
with the bigger pattern, have driven a bunch of
them into the undecided column:Swing voters also are increasingly uncertain
about which candidate can best defend the
country against terrorism. In the survey
conducted before Clarke's allegations were
widely publicized, fully 72% of swing voters said
they felt Bush was the candidate best able to
protect the U.S. from future terrorist attacks,
while just 11% preferred Kerry. The current survey finds only 50% citing Bush
as stronger on this issue, though Kerry made
no significant gains on this issue. The
proportion of swing voters who don't see either
candidate as better on terrorism more than
doubled from 17% to 37% as events have
unfolded.Considering how little most of these voters
know about Kerry (plus, given the weight of
Bush's carefully constructed "master and
commander" image) this is not a particularly
surprising trend, nor a discouraging one.
Absent any further information, though, it seems
likely these voters will eventually gravitate back
towards Bush on the terrorism issue -- it's the
path of least resistance. So while Clarke has
succeeded in planting seeds of doubt, it's up to
Kerry to see if he can make them grow, by
presenting these voters with a compelling, or at
least plausible, alternative.The bottom line -- and it's a line I've come back
to several times lately -- is that the current state
of the campaign actually shows how much the
country has changed over the past 10 or 15
years. There was a time when a propaganda
sledgehammer like the one the GOP is now
using on Kerry would have cracked a
Democratic candidate open like a soft peanut.
Now, it's been barely enough to bring Bush
(who two-and-a-half years ago had the highest
presidential approval rating in Gallup history)
back to even with him.Which means all you political junkies out there
might want to stock up on those B-complex
stress tabs. Because we've still got seven more
months to go in this race, and you're probably
going to need an ample supply.
Posted by billmon at March 30, 2004 04:06 PM |
TrackBack
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billmon
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Follow the Bouncing PollsToday I hear much gnashing of teeth and cries
of woe from the left -- and screams of savage
triumph from the right -- because of a new
Gallup poll showing Bush allegedly "surging"
against Kerry -- despite (or perhaps even
because of) the Richard Clarke media frenzy.I suggest everyone pop a few Vitamin B-
complex stress tabs and calm down. There is
much, much less to this than meets the eye.The last Gallup poll was conducted almost a
month ago -- when Kerry was still riding the
wave of (relatively) favorable publicity that
carried him through the primaries, and Bush
had not yet cranked up the GOP's multi-million
dollar advertising death star. That survey
showed Kerry with a 5-point lead over Bush
among registered voters, which even then was
on the high side of the polling universe.Since that time, it's become amply clear the
race has narrowed to something close to a
statistical tie. It's just that Gallup is now catching
up with the parade. I've also noticed in the past
that Gallup numbers tend to be a bit more
volatile than most of the major national polls,
and I suspect that's the case here as well. And indeed, we have the Pew Center calling the
race essentially dead even -- Kerry 47%, Bush
46% -- even though the Republican money blitz
is clearly taking a toll on Kerry's favorable/
unfavorable rating, and the edge he has
enjoyed on some key issues: Earlier this month, voters trusted Kerry more
than Bush to improve the job situation and
health care systems by margins of roughly two-
to-one. Today, these margins are much tighter,
as the percent expressing confidence in Kerry
has declined. In mid-March, 53% cited Kerry as better able to
improve economic conditions, today 44% favor
Kerry in this area. The percentage citing Bush
has remained relatively stable, while the
proportion saying they don't know who would be
better has increased.Some erosion in Kerry's standing was
inevitable, given the waning of the "primary
effect," and the kind of money the BC (Bush-
Cheney, or Before Christ, take your pick) crew
has been able to throw onto the airwaves. Our
paleolithic opponents are leaning hard on
some buttons that are wired deep into the
brains of many voters -- especially those whose
world views were formed in the Reagan years: One of the more striking findings in the new
[Gallup] poll is the increased public perception
that Kerry is "too liberal." Four in 10 Americans
(41%) now take this view, up from 29% in late
January. At the same time, the percentage
saying Kerry's views are "about right" has
dropped from 46% to 37%.And yet, all this Pavlovian stimuation has only
brought Bush roughly even with Kerry on the
ideological seesaw:Americans are generally split between viewing
Bush as too conservative (38%) and about right
(40%), while 15% consider him too liberal.(You have to wonder about that 15% who think
Shrub is too liberal. Is the militia movement
really that big??) But the real question isn't whether Kerry has
been damaged, but how serious is the
damage, and how long will it last? And on those
scores, I see some hopeful signs in the Pew
survey. It appears that so far, at least, ush's
spring offensive has only succeeded in driving
voters back into the undecided camp. But he
has not (at least as yet) managed to rally them
to his side:In fact, on a wide range of issues, from
terrorism to the economy to health care, a
growing number of voters are saying that they
do not know which candidate would do a better
job, or that neither is clearly preferable.Bush is the incumbent. People know him. So
Bush's political brain trust (well, "trust" in the
Enron sense of the word) understands that the
longer voters remain in the undecided column,
the more likely they are to favor the challenger in
the end -- unless they're given a strong reason
to lay aside their original doubts, the ones that
drove them away from the incumbent in the first
place. Right now, it doesn't look like Bush has given
them those reasons. He's stopped the
bleeding, but he still hasn't stitched up the
wound. What's more, the Pew Survey also shows
Clarke's attacks have had a significant political
impact on independent voters -- and, in keeping
with the bigger pattern, have driven a bunch of
them into the undecided column:Swing voters also are increasingly uncertain
about which candidate can best defend the
country against terrorism. In the survey
conducted before Clarke's allegations were
widely publicized, fully 72% of swing voters said
they felt Bush was the candidate best able to
protect the U.S. from future terrorist attacks,
while just 11% preferred Kerry. The current survey finds only 50% citing Bush
as stronger on this issue, though Kerry made
no significant gains on this issue. The
proportion of swing voters who don't see either
candidate as better on terrorism more than
doubled from 17% to 37% as events have
unfolded.Considering how little most of these voters
know about Kerry (plus, given the weight of
Bush's carefully constructed "master and
commander" image) this is not a particularly
surprising trend, nor a discouraging one.
Absent any further information, though, it seems
likely these voters will eventually gravitate back
towards Bush on the terrorism issue -- it's the
path of least resistance. So while Clarke has
succeeded in planting seeds of doubt, it's up to
Kerry to see if he can make them grow, by
presenting these voters with a compelling, or at
least plausible, alternative.The bottom line -- and it's a line I've come back
to several times lately -- is that the current state
of the campaign actually shows how much the
country has changed over the past 10 or 15
years. There was a time when a propaganda
sledgehammer like the one the GOP is now
using on Kerry would have cracked a
Democratic candidate open like a soft peanut.
Now, it's been barely enough to bring Bush
(who two-and-a-half years ago had the highest
presidential approval rating in Gallup history)
back to even with him.Which means all you political junkies out there
might want to stock up on those B-complex
stress tabs. Because we've still got seven more
months to go in this race, and you're probably
going to need an ample supply.
Posted by billmon at March 30, 2004 04:06 PM |
TrackBack
