Thursday, July 3, 2008

Energy Gap: Following Campaign News "Very Closely"

As the political news shows bury themselves in the micro stories such as Affaire Clark, the macro factors continue to be the most striking indicators in this election. In addition to right track/wrong track numbers that in poll after poll after poll after poll (despite some Nate-noted problems with the LA Times/Bloomberg poll) presage a mammoth wave of voter dissatisfaction, voter enthusiasm disparity continues to be a macro-level harbinger of bad tidings for Republicans. (See case studies here, here, and here.)

Courtesy of Pew, we learn that Democrats are following news about this presidential race much more closely than Republicans. Since the start of the campaign, Pew has tracked the percentage of partisans and independents following campaign news “very closely.” As July 2008 opens, this index shows its widest gap since Pew began tracking: 52% (of Ds) to 28% (of Rs), a near double-up.



This is a fascinating chart. Three things jump out. One, the intensely competitive race began to climax interest-wise in late February with the onset of “Shame on You Barack Obama!” and Clinton’s drama-laden Kitchen Sink Strategy.

Two, for all of the initial hit from Kitchen Sink Strategy drama, for all the Jeremiah Wright and Bittergate controversies that began in mid-March and which captured the media’s collective breath, the "very close" public interest dropped sharply (10-15% across the board).

Three, the single most interesting time for Republican voters, to date, occurred not when John McCain won the nomination battle but when Obama and Clinton were going at it hot and heavy in the roughly ten-day runup to the March 4 primaries.

This final point has to be troubling and underscores the rationale behind the shakeup in the McCain camp yesterday. Whichever guilty party you want to blame it on – historic and dynamic Obama/Clinton campaigns, the “liberal media” obstinately refusing to report on McCain, lack of enthusiasm among Republicans for what their own party hath wrought, McCain himself for his gruntychucklish “that’s not change you can believe in!” lime-green delivery – the fact that the window of McCain’s own nomination win (mid-30s) was far less attention-capturing for Republicans than Obama v. Clinton for the March 4 runup (mid-40s) cannot be spun both positively and persuasively.

To win, McCain needs big Republican turnout to compete with the expected big Democratic turnout. He can’t rely solely on antipathy toward Obama. He has to inspire his own base, and he can’t do that if his base finds Democratic drama is 25-30% more riveting than him winning the nomination. For a game-changing move in the numbers, McCain needs game-changing messaging.

If there is any comfort for McCain partisans out of the chart, maybe it’s that there’s still room for Obama to be defined in the minds of less-attentive Republicans (and independents, who generally track with Republicans by this measure), particularly if the Republican base is not yet tuned into "campaign news." Underground smears, though not officially owned by the campaign, will certainly be a part of it. Just the other day an otherwise sweet girl solemnly informed me that Obama was secretly only “8.25% black.” (Yes, that is one-12.1212121212th black, for those scoring at home.) But something tells me the dissatisfied public right track/wrong track mood is going to dwarf the traction of smears. If I were a Republican, I wouldn’t feel comfortable betting on the smears.


Perhaps the most significant lesson Pew's chart teaches us is that Kitchen Sink attacks and "controversy" depress "very close" attention across the board. Counterintuitively for those who voraciously consume political news and have an emotional investment in the outcome, just when it seems like everything is becoming Urgent with a capital U because of some particular story, that very well may be when the aggregate of millions are tuning out.

31 comments

Anonymous said...

Nice piece, and glad to see you back, Sean. For a couple of days there I thought we had scared you off ;)

Anonymous said...

I looked the exit poll from Nevada in 2004.

Kerry lost by only 21.000 vote.

For me, it's impossible for Obama lose in Nevada with the big turnout.

Las Vegas and Clark County will be big this year.

http://us.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/pages/results/states/NV/P/00/

http://us.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/pages/results/states/NV/P/00/epolls.0.html

seandalai said...

Maybe the Republican base is mainly excited about demonising and defeating the Democratic nominee, regardless of who runs for their own party? After all, one of the anti-Clinton narratives in the primary was that she would energise the right (against her) more effectively than the right could energise themselves...I don't know whether this hypothesis is at all true, but it's a defensible interpretation of the data you present.

jonathan said...

In 2004, most voters I knew - including Republicans - were in the "anybody but Bush" camp. That dynamic may be playing out this year for the Repubs. It would have been the overwhelming dynamic with Clinton (for essentially no good reason), but will still play a big role..

Adam said...

The flip side to this should be of some concern to the Obama camp though. What does it say that despite a 54-28 advantage in enthusiasm we only see Obama leading by about five points?

If something, anything, happens to excite the Right - like a VP choice that will go over well or if Obama makes some blunder or if GOP interest groups successfully paint the unknown Obama as unpalatable - and the enthusiasm gap narrows it seems to me that Obama's numbers could look a lot less rosy in a big hurry.

Anon,

If McCain chooses Romney as his running mate (someone I didn't really like at all during the primary contest) he'll motivate the Mormons to come out in droves and that may well hold the state for the Republicans. From the exit polling of the NV Caucus on the GOP side, Mormons made up 21 percent of all Republicans that went to the polls - but they make up only seven percent of the population. Those folks CAN potentially become energized quickly. I'm not sure a Romney choice is worth it because I'm not convinced Romney will go over well in Ohio. He's not a natural fit for the state - but then again neither is Obama.

asmodeus said...

Echo that it's great to see you back, Senor Nines? Although, I would argue (perhaps, counterintuitively to you but according to my own understanding intuitively) that 'counterintuitively' (in your last paragraph) needs to be replaced by 'intuitively' - i.e. that intuition is an evolving faculty for an individual and that it feeds itself on whatever facts are currently available to said individual. So, if you learn something new, that is part of a your new current intuitiveness. Hopefully that's comprehensible.

Pete Kent said...

The only energy gap that matters is the one at the gas pumps. Obama and the democrats are on the wrong side of drilling and nukes. The RNC is launching their first ad on this topic today.

Evangelicals got together yesterday and are determined to defeat Obama. Obama inspires a lot of energy. Unfortunately for him a lot of it is negative.

Matthew said...

Sean,

I have to dispute your claim that the republican nomination was not of interest to republicans, and that it was the run up of the democrats to March 4 that was what caused their spike in interest. McCain clinched his party's nomination on March 4. Sure, everyone knew he was going to win before that, but on March 4 it was official.

For Democrats on June 6, there was a spike in interest on June 6, even though everyone knew the outcome already, Republicans surely were interested in watching it happen officially.

Judge C. Crater said...

The data on I's is wildly confusing. If they are as uninterested as R's does than mean they will trend with the R's? I'd always assumed that I's would seek their own path requiring them to be more interested than the average. Is BHO's appeal to the I's overstated? Will their apparent apathy cause I's to stay home in droves on election day?

SarahLawrenceScott said...

Interesting post.

Regarding the last paragraph, though, it seems to me that a simpler hypothesis is that interest drops when uncertainty in the outcome drops. Despite attempts by the Clinton campaign and much of the media to make the primary race seem close in March through May, the numbers dictated that it was very difficult for Clinton to overtake Obama. Now that we're looking toward the general, interest has picked up again.

I have to say, I'm surprised by that. It means most people are more politically savvy than I might have expected.

Chris said...

Ugh, yet another post from Sean. His absence recently has made me enjoy this blog again. But wild-eyed interpretation with little regard for data is back!

At least this time, he didn't throw in superfluous sexist comments.

asmodeus said...

Your comment, 'Chris', is a better example of 'wild-eyed interpretation with little regard for data'. I'll repeat I think Senor Nines is doing a good job (now that he is being more concise).

Stephen C. Rose said...

Some posts make me happy that comments on my blog are infrequent, moderated and generally not of the forum type ad hominem variety. Self righteously yours, S

PS. I agree with Sean's post and the welcome backs.

Anonymous said...

a stunningly original insight - factually supported.

can anyone continue to wonder why the blogiverse will replace traditional media feedback loops?

terrific. where is it you post about baseball again?

John Peterson said...

"Liberal media," eh? The so-called "liberal media," right?

What kind of smears are you talking about?

Are you even paying attention? Or are you drunk on hope and change?