Voters Strongly Favor Non-Incumbent GOP Newcomers in Midterm Elections
. By contrast, Democrats are giving far less thought to the elections today than they did in the final weeks before the prior four midterms. As a result, Democrats are on par with independents in current attention levels — a sharp departure from recent years, when the Democrats exceeded independents on this measure.
The large party gap in “thought” suggests the typical Republican turnout advantage could be larger than usual this year if that gap persists until Election Day. Attention normally spikes as elections approach, and this is likely to occur among Democrats. However, it is unclear whether the Republicans have reached the limit for how much attention they will pay to a midterm election, or whether their attention will rise to perhaps a historic level by November. How this plays out will determine Democrats’ ability to catch up to Republicans on this measure before Election Day, and will in turn determine the size of the Republican turnout advantage.
It’s a virtual certainty that voters’ attention to the election will increase in the coming months. If this increase is proportionate between Republicans and Democrats, then the Republicans will likely maintain a formidable turnout advantage. However, it’s also possible that Republicans have merely tuned in early to the elections, leaving less room for their attention to expand — and thus giving the Democrats an opportunity to narrow the gap by November.Temper Tantrum?
In Our Quick-Fix Electorate on Real Clear Politics, Eugene Robinson proclaims
…This isn’t an “electoral wave,” it’s a temper tantrum. In the punditry business, it’s considered bad form to question the essential wisdom of the American people. But at this point, it’s impossible to ignore the obvious: The American people are acting like a bunch of spoiled brats. …there’s no mistaking the public mood, and the truth is that it makes no sense.
On the contrary, this makes perfect sense. The public is fed up with how beholden Obama is to unions. They are fed up with sacrifices they have to make that government workers don’t. They are fed up with how well the political class has fared in this election vs. how well they have fared in this election. They are fed up with never-ending wars.
It’s not that people prefer Republicans by some huge margin. They don’t. They specifically prefer non-incumbent Republicans hoping for a Change. Obama promised “Change you could believe in”, but where is it? We are still bogged down in Afghanistan, Obama did not get us out of Guantanamo Bay as promised, but most importantly he did continue the same bailout strategies and surrounded himself with the same economic philosophy and same Wall Street advisors as Bush.
The public is fed up and rightfully so. The anti-union vote is going to be huge, and deservedly so.
I am increasingly confident that Republicans are going to take the House. So be prepared to Kiss Nancy Pelosi goodbye and be prepared to welcome John Boehner as the new House speaker. Perhaps we can get some real change. If not, gridlock is better than what we have seen under Obama.
Mike “Mish” Shedlock
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By Mike Shedlock on 09/04/2010 1:18 am PDT -- Economy