10.09.2012

soundtrack to the obamacolypse


(This song doesn't really have anything to do with the post; I just heard it over the weekend and really liked it.) 

I thought Dave Weigel's response to the responses to polls was pretty dead on. And I kind of just want to give Andrew Sullivan big old hug right now.

One of the joys of political ambivalence (and I use the term loosely*) is that even when things look grim for your chosen horse, it's relatively easy to shrug it off and get on with your life. That said, I think it is worth considering for a moment the Big Swing. I'd offer up three (not mutually exclusive) hypotheses: 

1) Polls really aren't that accurate after all.
2) The number of persuadable voters in this election has been vastly underestimated, by me and damn near everyone else.
3) This is an outlier election.

Addressing (1) is kind of a Schrodinger's Cat sort of situation, in that you only ever get to test the accuracy of any given poll once.  Looking retrospectively at the data, it's pretty clear that poll accuracy (globally) is a roughly inverse function of time before the actual election. (Of course exceptions exist, particularly with exit polls.) But this doesn't exclude the possibility that polls are in fact very accurate snapshots of the electorate at the time they are taken. We just can't ever really know if this is true or not. So let's leave it.

Personally, I think that we're looking at roughly equal parts (2) and (3), and these are interrelated. The theme that could run through them both is that we have an incumbent that a lot of people are really unhappy with and a challenger that a lot of the same people are also really unhappy with. To my mind, that leaves a lot of people on the fence just waiting for someone to give them a reason to break one way or another. And the president's lousy performance in the debate may very well have been just the thing.

The Romney camp has been trying to paint this as a replay of 1980; Obama, as 1996. It's not hard to see why each would pick those years. But I actually think the best precedent in the modern era is 2004. Plenty of people were highly motivated to unseat GW Bush; very few of them (us) were terribly excited about voting for John Kerry. And we know how that went.

Obama would do well to learn from that election, and by that I do not mean taking heart in the result. This is the rare time when I would admonish him to emulate his predecessor--get out there, defend your record like you mean it, and act like you want to be the fucking president for another four years. 


*Joy, I mean.

6 comments:

Mr. D said...

But I actually think the best precedent in the modern era is 2004.

Nope. 1992. And you give the reason in your post:

This is the rare time when I would admonish him to emulate his predecessor--get out there, defend your record like you mean it, and act like you want to be the fucking president for another four years.

If his heart is in it, it could be 2004. If not, 1992 is more likely. And it could be 1980. At this point I don't see 1996 happening any more.

Brian said...

Well, we'll see who shows up in a couple of weeks, I guess.

If he'd rather be doing something else, I could hardly blame him. But the time to come to that conclusion was about a year ago.

Gino said...

i was thinking 1992 too, before D spelled it out.
but there are some differences. 92 featured an energetic and widely loved challenger.

and a third party 'spoiler'.

Brian said...

Mitt Romney is no Bill Clinton, that much is true.

Mr. D said...

But the time to come to that conclusion was about a year ago.

Yep. But things have changed since then in a lot of ways. The economy looked a lot better a year ago than it does now.

92 featured an energetic and widely loved challenger.

and a third party 'spoiler'.


Well, I don't remember Clinton being loved that much in '92, but YMMV, Gino. You're right, there's no Perot in this cycle, but had Bush 41 been more engaged Perot would not have bothered to run.

And I agree that Mitt Romney is no Bill Clinton, but neither is Barack Obama.

Bike Bubba said...

My thought is that if Obama wants to be President, he needs to come to the realization that political peers are indeed worthy of debate, not simply people to be dismissed. His problem there was front and center in the debate.