Them Dems

archived: 11 - 17 Nov, 2007         Back                 Next

UPDATED:  NOV 14, 2007

                        SIGNS? 

The 2007 election cycle provided mixed message for Democrats.  Republicans capture the Governorship of Louisiana in a cakewalk. Of course, former Democrat Governor Blanco was blamed for recovery efforts in New Orleans.  Democrats win the Governorship of Kentucky.  But, the Republican Governor seeking reelection was scandal ridden and was simply never competitive in the race.  Both elections represent a rather cruel wash for both Parties.  

Virginia proved interesting for Democrats.  Virginia appears to be trending Democrat as the Party recaptured a majority (by one vote) in the Virginia Senate.  Democrats also narrowed the gap in the Virginia House of Delegates.  While Democrats clearly gained in Virginia, it was not a disaster for Republicans.  Margaret Edds of The Virginian-Pilot explains (emphasis added):  

OBSTRUCTIONISM AND extremism are out. Pragmatism and moderation are in.  

That's the clearest message from an election that handed four seats and a state Senate majority to Virginia Democrats while continuing the six-year, drip-drip-drip erosion from a 30-seat to a 10-seat GOP advantage in the House. 

Moderation isn't the only message, however, and depending on how one reads the results, there are consolations and warnings for both Democrats and Republicans.  

 Here are several messages and musings from Tuesday's elections: 

Once solid-red suburbs in Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads have cracked open their doors to Democrats. 

The trend became evident in the outer-Washington suburbs of Prince William and Loudoun counties with the election of Democratic Gov. Tim Kaine in 2005.  

Virginia Beach, which favored Republican gubernatorial nominee Mark Earley by seven percentage points in 2001, went narrowly for Kaine as well. 

This year Democrats picked up a House seat in Prince William and two in Virginia Beach. Something's afoot in those citadels of conservatism, and preservation-minded Republicans had best figure out what it is. 

Virginia voters are more swayed by forward-looking ideas than scare tactics.  

 During the 1990s, Democrats trotted out the same list of boogeymen - televangelist Pat Robertson, the demise of Roe v. Wade, and easy gun purchases - year after year. By the time they figured out that voters cared more about tax cuts and parole reform, Republicans controlled the political landscape. 

Now, the GOP seems gripped by similar myopia. Voters may care about illegal immigration, but they apparently recognize the reality.  

There's not a lot state government can do to contain it. The big theme fizzled on Election Day 2007, just as it did for GOP gubernatorial hopeful Jerry Kilgore in 2005. 

Democrats are advancing in the legislature, but their gains are disproportionately concentrated in Northern Virginia and, to a lesser extent, Hampton Roads. 

In both the House and Senate, more than two-thirds of the Democratic caucus hails from the two populous urban regions. The Republican House caucus, in contrast, has solid contingents from every section of Virginia, including the north and the southeast, as well as central and western Virginia. 

To the extent that Virginia's population growth is centered down here and up there, this is not a problem for Democrats. But to the extent that Republicans run statewide candidates with Beltway appeal, or come up with a message that captivates soccer dads and white-collar moms, the Democratic bubble could burst. 

Democrats won five hotly contested Senate races, but Republicans won four (assuming Fairfax Sen. Ken Cuccinelli's 92-vote victory holds). Democrats have to be disappointed that intense efforts in a couple of Southside House races and a Roanoke Senate district came to naught.  

Before Republicans take too much comfort, however, it's also true that Democrats were far more competitive than might have been expected a year or two back in all those races - just as it's true that a few Democrats, including Virginia Beach's Joe Bouchard, won by a whisker. . . .  

In Loudoun, voters replaced a 6-1 GOP majority on the Board of Supervisors with five Democrats and two independents. In Chesterfield, voters similarly frustrated by overcrowded roads and schools elected four new board members, including a Democrat and an independent. 

The 2007 elections are part of a continuum begun when Democrat Mark Warner won the governorship six years ago. Since that time, voters generally - though not in every instance - have rewarded candidates who combined frugality with concern for education, transportation, health care and the environment. 

It's a practical, slightly right-of-center message that excludes those who stray either too far right or left. Wonder who'll win in Virginia in the 2008 presidential and senatorial races and the 2009 gubernatorial race? That's your answer.

Thirty-two special elections were held across the United States during 2007 to fill US House and State legislative seats.  Democrats have managed to gain four state legislative seats from Republicans, one in each of New York, Delaware, Florida and Maine.  Republicans gained no seats against Democrats.

Several observations are pertinent: 

1.       Of the 11 seats that Republicans had held; Democrats managed to gain four.   

2.       Democratic Party gains have largely been limited to the Northeast, where Republican fortunes have been on the decline in recent years. 

3.       Of the eight Republican held seats in the South, Democrats managed to wrest only one from Republicans.  In Florida, four special elections in Republican seats netted the only Democratic Party gain.   

Assuming that the 2007 election and special election cycle is a bellwether of what is to come in 2008, what message are voters sending?  The voting public seems prepared to give Democrats consideration, particularly in the northeast and in urban areas generally.   

It is always better to gain seats than lose seats; so Democrats have clearly been the nominal “winners” in the 2007 election cycle.  The number and pattern of Democrat gains, however, do not suggest a political tsunami against Republicans. Democrats still have a long way to go to fashion a truly national Party.    

For those who may be predicting the utter demise of the Republican Party; that belief represents excessive exuberance.  Republicans are taking their “licks,” but there is nothing in the pattern of 2007 elections to suggest that the Republican Party has collapsed.  

_____________________________________________

UPDATED:  NOV 11, 2007

                        AN EXCELLENT QUESTION 

Dr. Charles Franklin, a professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin and publisher of Political Arithmetik (a TPJ Favorite), has penned an excellent analysis of public attitudes on the war in Iraq.  His research indicates an 8% uptick in Americans who view the war as going better.   

 His article is must reading, but his central analysis

While I've been doing back room work the last two months, some interesting changes have taken place in opinion about the war, the president, congress and the country. It is too early, and the changes too modest, to declare this a "turning point" in opinion, but the changes are consistent enough to take a hard look and ponder if there is still potential for significant shifts over the next 52 weeks until Election Day 2008.

The single most striking shift is the change in opinion about how the war in Iraq is going. After four and a half years of steady downward trends, there has been a reversal of direction since July.

CBS, CNN and Pew have asked "How well is the military effort in Iraq going?" since the war started (with some minor variation in wording. See the details here.) The virtue of this question is its consistent use over time and its summary evaluation of the war.

President Bush's change of policy in Iraq in January, coupling a change of command with a surge of troop levels did not produce immediately positive responses from the public. Likewise the rise in U.S. casualties in the spring following the change in deployment strategy certainly might have been expected to further erode support for the war and for Bush.

But in retrospect the actions have been accompanied by two phases of changing opinion on "how the war is going". From January through June, the long running collapse in positive evaluation of the war (especially in the second half of 2006) halted. The flattening now appears to have clearly coincided with the change in command and troop levels.

This flattening didn't signal rising opinion on the war-- but after dropping over 13 percentage points in six months, simply arresting the collapse was a major plus for the administration. And this is a particularly striking thing given that the spring of 2007 was a focal point for critiques of the war in Congress, with Democratic leadership repeatedly pushing votes that would have required changes in Iraq policy of various kinds. And this flattening came at the same time that casualties rose.

The second phase of opinion change started in early July, when positive evaluations of the war took their first upturn since late 2003 (around the time of the capture of Saddam Husein). The trend estimate has turned up some 8 percentage points since July 1, still not back to early 2006 levels, but remarkable this late in an unpopular war and with a weak leader and determined opposition.

It is also worth noting that this is not just a shift due to "undecided" citizens shifting. The percentage saying the war is going badly also stabilized through the spring and has turned down to about 58%, from a high of 69% at the end of 2006.

Through the spring, conservatives and Republican supporters of President Bush argued for "giving the surge a chance". This rhetoric shifted in the summer to claims that "the surge has worked". Meanwhile Democrats and liberals pushed for a timetable for withdrawal through the spring and early summer. Very few citizens have a clear idea of any quantitative measures of how the war is "actually" going. Even trends in American deaths are rarely comprehensively presented in news reports (though sometimes mentioned in passing as "factoids".) And even among supporters of the war claims of "success of the surge" were rarely supported by direct evidence. (An exception to the lack of evidence was a widely debated op-ed piece in the New York Times by Kenneth Pollack and Michael O'Hanlon of the Brookings Institution on July 30. O'Hanlon has produced the comprehensive "Iraq Index" at Brookings, an invaluable compilation of measurable trends in the war. Ironically, the op-ed piece was based on "anecdotes" from a visit to Iraq rather than quantitative measures.)

But citizens don't shift their opinion based on quantified measures of progress, nor even New York Times or Weekly Standard articles. For most citizens, opinions are driven more by the messages they hear from partisan leaders, with some sifting for credibility of the claims and filtering by predispositions. And, it must be added, by some effects of "reality", whatever that is.

The current upturn in positive views of the war then reflect perhaps some bits of success on the ground. US deaths are down. Iraqi civilian deaths are down. But if it were casualties alone that drove opinion, positive views should have fallen sharply in the spring as the death tolls of both US troops and Iraqis increased. Instead opinion became flat. So it would be too simple minded to imagine a direct causal effect of casualties on views of the war.

So what to make of the upturn in positive views of how the war is going? Republicans (including the president) have made real progress in swaying opinion to their side, while 10 months of Democratic efforts have failed to persuade citizens that the war continues to be a disaster. The war of partisan persuasion has tilted towards the Republicans and away from the Democrats, at least in this particular aspect.

Let's be clear: the trend estimate is that only 38% think the war is going well, while 58% say it is not going well. The balance remains on the pessimistic side and by a 20 point margin. What I am talking about is the change in trend and the shift of marginal opinion. But that is a telling indicator. On election day a year ago today, the partisan war for public opinion seemed to have decisively shifted to the Democratic view. The notion that there was nothing the White House could do to reverse their public losses of support was widespread. But the last 10 months show that indeed there was something that could change and this change is important.

In further posts, Dr. Franklin is asking intriguing questions; “Dems should think about what their plan is if opinion of the war DOES improve. How then to speak to the public about the war and what comes next[?]" 

The "rub" comes in explaining why the marginal increase has occurred in public perception that the war in Iraq is developing more favorably.  Dr. Franklin notes that deaths in Iraq among citizens and troops have declined in recent months.  But, he finds no statistical correlation between statistics of deaths in Iraq and shifts in the public viewing the war more favorably. Dr. Franklin, instead, finds the root cause of the increase stemming from the public relations efforts of the Republicans: 

So what to make of the upturn in positive views of how the war is going? Republicans (including the president) have made real progress in swaying opinion to their side, while 10 months of Democratic efforts have failed to persuade citizens that the war continues to be a disaster. The war of partisan persuasion has tilted towards the Republicans and away from the Democrats, at least in this particular aspect.

Dr. Franklin’s excellent research suggests that Democrats may be losing the public debate over one aspect of the war.  As Dr. Franklin suggests, public attitudes toward America's involvement in the war and occupation of Iraq are complex. 

At TPJ, we believe that the public views the war from multiple perspectives and formulates discrete judgments from each perspective.  First, during the period that Dr. Franklin finds an improving view of progress in Iraq, there was no "surge" in public opinion that the war was worth fighting.  ABC News, Associated Press and CBS have asked Americans if, in retrospect, invading Iraq was the right or wrong decision, essentially asking if America should have gone into Iraq or stayed out.  The formulations of each polling firm’s questions are not exactly the same, which does undercut the value of their comparison, but the differing questions probe a retrospective judgment on the war and occupation.  The chart immediately below; Washington Post (blue), CBS (red) and Associated Press (grey), demonstrates no significant change in public attitudes that America should not have gone into Iraq: 

 

Into Iraq

Stayed Out

No Opinion

 

 

 

 

1/10/2007

40

58

2

1/8-10/07

35

62

3

Average

37.5

60

2.5

 

 

 

 

2/12-15/07

37

61

2

2/22-25/07

34

64

2

Average

35.5

62.5

2

 

 

 

 

4/12-15/07

33

66

1

4/2-4/07

39

59

2

Average

36

62.5

1.5

 

 

 

 

5/18-23/07

35

61

4

5/29 - 6/1/07

37

61

2

Average

36

61

3

 

 

 

 

7/18-21/07

36

63

1

7/20-22/07

42

51

7

Average

39

57

4

 

 

 

 

9/27-30/07

38

59

3

9/4-7/07

36

62

2

9/4-8/07

41

54

5

9/6-9/07

37

57

6

Average

38

58

4

Second, Americans formulate judgments as to whether or not they "approve" or "disapprove" of Bush's conduct of the war. This is a current evaluation of Bush’s performance.  The chart below tracks polling results from the Washington Post (blue) and the Associated Press (grey) since January 2007.  The results have been remarkably stable throughout the entire period.

 

Approve

Disapprove

No Opinion

 

 

 

 

1/10/2007

34

64

2

1/16-18/07

32

65

2

1/16-19/07

29

70

1

1/8-10/07

29

68

2

Average

31

66.75

1.75

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2/22-25/07

31

67

1

2/5-7/07

30

67

3

Average

30.5

67

2

 

 

 

 

4/12-15/07

29

70

1

4/2-4/07

33

64

3

Average

31

67

2

 

 

 

 

5/29 - 6/1/07

31

67

1

5/7-9/07

33

64

2

Average

32

65.5

1.5

 

 

 

 

7/18-21/07

31

68

1

7/9-11/07

31

67

1

Average

31

67.5

1

 

 

 

 

9/10-12/07

33

65

2

9/27-30/07

30

68

1

9/4-7/07

34

65

1

Average

32

66

1

Finally, even if Americans view the situation in Iraq as improving, it has not benefited Bush generally.  As noted in DESCENDING AGAIN, the article immediately below, Bush's approval rating is actually falling again.

Dr. Franklin's article is warning, one that Democrats should take seriously.  Democrats who are opposed to Bush's occupation of Iraq  obviously need to increase their effort to make the case that the war has not brought the democracy to Iraq that Bush promised.  The article is also an important reminder that the battle for public opinion is an ongoing process that requires the daily commitment of every Democrat.

DESCENDING AGAIN

Three new public polls have been released since our last report.   Bush's average approval rating has dropped fractionally again.  However, that is not the story this week.

Carefully note that while Bush's approval rating declined marginally that Bush’s disapproval rating has risen by some 2.5% within less than two weeks.  Except for the WNBC/Marist poll, the five remaining polls in October peg Bush's disapproval at 63% or above.  October's average disapproval rating to date is the third highest rate of disapproval in the 2 1/2 years TPJ has tracked Bush's public standing.

In previous months, we have noted that a decline in those with no opinion usually corresponded to increases in Bush's approval rating.  That trend has reversed in October.  Those with no opinion fell from 5.90% to 4.33% (-1.57%) accompanied by a rise in Bush's disapproval rating 60.9% to 63.17% (+2.27%).  Two observations are important.  First, public attitudes of Bush's performance in office continue to harden against the president.  Second, if this trend continues, Bush’s approval rating will fall even further.

Another factor that portends a further fall in Bush's approval rating is the national economy.  Gasoline prices are rising and the value of the US dollar is falling.  Several polls already reflect that Americans are souring over the faltering economy. 

The war in Iraq, perhaps the most important factor governing Bush's approval rating, continues without apparent end.  With the national economy and the war in Iraq providing negative impetus to Bush's approval rating, we speculate that Bush's approval rating will continue to fall in the immediate future.

TPJ'S BUSH WATCH

 

 

Approve

Trail Mo

Disapprove

No Opinion

Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AP-Ipsos

11/5-7/07

32

 

65

3

-33

NBC/WSJ

11/1-5/07

31

 

63

6

-32

CNN/Opinion Research

11/2-4/07

34

 

65

1

-31

USA Today/Gallup

11/2-4/07

31

 

64

5

-33

ABC/Washington Post

10/29 - 11/1/07

33

 

64

3

-31

WNBC/Marist RV

10/29 - 11/1/07

34

 

58

8

-24