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The Many Elections of 2012. Elections and Lessons. Overview: Congressional elections and polarization, 1950s to 2012, with a bit of Redistricting The Republican Nomination – Two Elections and Two Electorates The Presidential General Election – The Economy and…..?
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Elections and Lessons Overview: • Congressional elections and polarization, 1950s to 2012, with a bit of Redistricting • The Republican Nomination – Two Elections and Two Electorates • The Presidential General Election – The Economy and…..? • The Tea Party and the Republican Dilemma • 2013 and Obama’s Second Term
Congressional ElectionsPresidential NominationsThe Presidential General Election:What Polarization Looks Like: • Elite – Congress, sorting and movement toward the extremes • Public Perceptions • Activists • Is the Public?
Polarization in the Electorate:Comparing Views of Presidential Candidates in 1968 and 2008
The Nomination Campaign • Two major features • Tradeoff between representing the beliefs of primary voters versus convincing them of the need to win the general election • The public learning about the candidates
General Election • The General Election is three contests • Tradeoff between mobilizing the base and winning the center • A referendum on the incumbent party • A choice of the person to be president
The GOP and the Tea Party The Tea Party is three things, relevant to here: • First, it was a public expression of frustration • Second, it was taken over quickly by the most right-wing leadership of the actual GOP and then assimilated quickly into the actual GOP itself
The GOP and the Tea Party The Tea Party is three things, relevant to here: • First, it was a public expression of frustration • Second, it was assimilated into the GOP quickly. • Third, it turns out that it really was both an economic movement and a broad, nation wide, that is to say non-southern dominated movement and organized, part of the Republican Party
The GOP and the Tea Party The Tea Party is three things, relevant to here: • First, it was a public expression of frustration • Second, it was assimilated into the GOP quickly. • Third, it really was not a southern dominated movement. • Item: GOP leadership 1955 – 0 of 10 (House and Senate) GOP leadership 1995 – 7 of 10 GOP leadership 2011 – 3 of 10
The GOP and the Tea Party The Tea Party is three things, relevant to here: • First, it was a public expression of frustration • Second, it was taken over quickly by the most right-wing leadership of the actual GOP and then assimilated quickly into the actual GOP itself • Third, it turns out that it really was both an economic movement and a broad, nation wide, that is to say non-southern dominated movement and organized, part of the Republican Party • Item: GOP leadership 1995 – 7 of 10 (House and Senate) GOP leadership 2011 – 3 of 10
A Note on 2010 • Our (Aldrich, Bishop, Hatch, Hillygus, Rohde) data show that 2010 had two major features that turned what might have been a regularly slightly GOP year into a rout. • 1. High turnout among those who approved of the Tea Party, above expectations, and overtaking Blacks, Latinos, and youth voting from 2008. • 2. High Republican vote among moderates, independents, and weaker Democrats who blamed Bush or banks/Wall Street for the economic collapse (about 2 in 3 in 2010, down to a slim majority today) but held Democrats responsible for not doing enough to fix it. • These two are roughly equally sized groups. • Opposition to “Obamacare” or the stimulus played a small role, if any role at all, above and beyond 1 and 2.
Tea Party 2012 • The 2010 elections were a zenith, although the Tea Party did not win in all cases. • It remains (at least in 2012) a potent force in primaries. • It appears to be a vulnerability in general elections. • Caveat 1: Redistricting helped conserve Tea Party victors. • Caveat 2: They will not be replaced, if they are replaced at all, by bipartisan moderates.
Implications for the future? • Further reduction of moderate office holders. • Continued increase in the likelihood of the selection of candidates who are extreme relative to the middle of the spectrum. • Elites recognize that party control is essential for policy success. Thus electoral success is a central consideration in all substantive processes. • The Pattern of Future Policy Making – Gridlock or Lurching from the Liberal to the Conservative side and back again.
Where Polarization Comes fromWhere the Tea Party Comes from Why the South is the primary driver