Your email address is safe with us. View our Privacy policy.
Author Bio:
Political commentator Mark Shields began his career as a campaign manager in 1968, when he helped to organize Robert F. Kennedy's campaign for the ...
Read more about Mark Shields.
Political commentator Mark Shields began his career as a campaign manager in 1968, when he helped to organize Robert F. Kennedy's campaign for the ...
Read more about Mark Shields.
Not All Politics Is Local
Mark Shields
Right there on the front page of the Oct. 23 Washington Post, "senior
administration officials" attributed the predicted defeat on Election
Day -- then still a week and a half off -- of Virginia Democratic
gubernatorial candidate Creigh Deeds to Deeds' failure to seek and
heed advice from the Obama White House.
This can only be called a "pre-mortem," obviously intended to counter any negative perception that President Obama's own popularity might be slipping in a state he carried just a year ago by pinning the blame for the defeat on the local guy.
But we already know, because the president's press secretary Robert Gibbs told us, that in 2009 Virginia and New Jersey "voters went to the polls to talk about and work through very local issues that didn't involve the president." Just as we learned from the campaign committee spokesman in 2001 -- after the candidates of the then-president's party lost governor's races in those same two states -- that "these (off-year) elections revolved around local issues and local candidates. There were no discernible national trends."
All of these rationalizations and excuses are baloney, bunk and bushwa. Off-year elections do matter, especially psychologically. Victories help fundraising, help candidate recruitment and lift party morale. Defeat can leave in its wake anxiety, even panic in party ranks. As Bill McInturff, the trusted Republican pollster, told reporters at a breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor, "You cannot imagine the carnage of losing 54 House seats (the number Republicans lost between the 2006-08 elections)."
If it's true that the three most important things about real estate are location, location, location, then the three most important things about Election Day are turnout, turnout, turnout. In the 2008 election -- with much of the credit going to the Barack Obama candidacy -- a voter turnout increase of 5 million over 2004 included 2 million more black voters, 2 million more Hispanic voters and approximately 600,000 more Asian voters. The only age group that produced a statistically significant increase was young voters.
But when it came to voter turnout in 2009, Obama's political coattails turned out to be a cutoff tank top. In 2008, Obama's strongest age group in Virginia, young voters (between 18 and 29), were 21 percent of the electorate and his weakest age group, voters over the age of 65, represented just 11 percent of the electorate. This year in Virginia, young voters shrunk to 10 percent of the total, while over-65 voters increased their share to 18 percent.
In fact, given the demographic makeup of the 2009 Virginia voters, even if Barack Obama had run as strongly as he did in 2008 among Democrats, Republicans and independents when he won that state, instead of carrying Virginia by 7 percent as he did, he would have lost Virginia to John McCain by 4 percent.
But for the meaning of it all, nobody explains the political reality better than respected Democratic pollster Peter D. Hart, who finds the 2009 election returns quite similar to those of 2008: "Then as now the 'In's' lost and the 'Out's' won, and the message remains the same: We want change, and we are unhappy with what's going on."
What do the American people feel toward Washington? In Hart's candid judgment, "disappointment and disgust." Instead of the new, fresh approach promised in 2008, voters still "see the same, old Washington" full of pettiness, partisanship and bile.
To compound the anger of citizens who, according to Hart, "are equally hostile to Wall Street," the only groups they see being helped by the government's economic policies -- at the expense of people who have lost their jobs or average working families -- are large banks and Wall Street investment companies. Those, sadly, are the final returns of 2009.
========
To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. Distributed By Creators.Com
Copyright 2009 Mark Shields
This news arrived on: 11/07/2009
Printer Friendly Version | Send this page to a friend | Post Comment
Rate This Story:
Great - 5 - 4 - 3 - 2 - 1 - Bad
Posted Comments:
11-10-2009 00:01
JCE wrote:
Republicans predicting victory is delusional and wishful thinking.
11-09-2009 00:27
wrote:
Democrats predicting defeat is only sour grapes.
11-08-2009 16:26
Helenuu wrote:
Governors are local
Every state has its own problems, and every governor has to answer for what goes on, so come election day they either win or lose according to what they have done locally, and it has nothing to do with national politics, so stop prophetising.
11-08-2009 13:27
Catharyne Stauffer wrote:
LOL , lately JCE your view points seem more center then left of center :))) Nice to see dear :)
11-08-2009 08:25
Redneck is here! wrote:
Change
Obviously, People still want "Change"! They just didn't want what they got! The media spent the last 8 years screamung Bush Bad, Bush Bad! Now that they are telling us how Obama and the demos are going to help us--- It's hard to blame these latest on Bush (but they will try)! Those on welfare got everything they wanted! But those working class got the shaft! Guess who votes? Now some of the young are listening to their older friends and parents! They see now what is in store and don't like it! Fool them =offer cheap college ---but no jobs when they graduate! Unlimited taxation but no jobs! Fantastic amounts of cash to the finantial execs. but no jobs! Even ACORN was too slow to interfere in NJ. Maybe they are too busy covering their tracks? The real people are starting at the local level--you are getting change that YOU won't like!
Comment archive | Comment FAQ's
![]() |
![]() |
|
View Mark Shields ezine stories by date or visit the complete archive |
Featured Channel: Politics
The ArcaMax Politics channel is one of 70 content categories offered by ArcaMax Publishing on this ... |











VideoSquares.com