A campaign will look at these numbers and conclude that it has a solid base of 20 out of 60 who will vote. It also has about 7 out of 60 who will vote for its candidate if they decide to show up, and can expect a good chance at 3 out of 6 undecided. If it works real hard on attracting the undecided vote, perhaps it gains another 1 out of 60. That means the undecideds voted 4 to 2 in favor of its candidate—a landslide. There are seven times more base voters who need encouragement—but are sure votes—than one is likely to accrue from the undecideds. How should one then allocate resources?
Recent campaigns have decided to concentrate most of their resources on turning out their base. This is an important change in emphasis. It means that you try to win elections by ensuring that the most extreme partisans view the candidate favorably, rather than depending upon wooing voters from the other side. This type of campaigning only serves to increase the polarization between the two parties.
Bishop provides an excellent discussion of the methods now used by the campaigns to turn out the vote. He describes the 2004 election as a turning point when new understandings of how voters reacted and how to reach them were put into play. The subject of his book is the segmentation that has occurred in our society over the last 30 years as our population has "sorted" itself into distinct regions populated by like-minded citizens. The segmentation and voting patterns are intertwined. This subject was discussed in Politics in the USA: The Big Sort—1976—2008.
In 2000 two researchers from Yale University, Donald Green and Alan Gerber performed an experiment to determine the most effective way of encouraging registered voters to actually vote.
This was an effect of enormous size. This proof of the efficacy of face-to-face interaction with voters was realized by both parties and became part of their strategies in the 2004 election. Bishop details how the Republicans were more successful than the Democrats because they better understood the interpersonal dynamics at play after Bishop’s big sort.
What did the Republicans understand that the Democrats didn’t? Bishop attributes it partly to the Republicans’ better utilization of micro-targeting schemes, similar to those commonly used now in advertising, in order to make contact with likely Republican voters. By collecting data about individuals one could accurately predict how they were likely to vote. Here is a glib example:
Bishop describes micro-targeting as a component of the winning strategy, but the Republicans’ main advantage was in better understanding how to interact with the individuals they targeted.
The Republicans concluded that the right sort of contact could increase the probability of garnering a vote by a factor of four. While the Democrats would bus in paid or volunteer canvassers to various locations, the Republicans focused on utilization of existing social circles in the various communities. They were able to recruit individuals who resided within these groups and would propagate the word. The goal was to have people contacted by those who would be recognized as someone "just like them." Republicans had a distinct advantage since their voters tend to be church goers. The churches themselves were organized into small groups of individuals so that even a megachurch provided a feeling of an intimate community. These people were easy pickings for the Republicans.
By the time the 2008 election rolled around the Democrats had learned their lesson and assembled a "ground game" that was much more efficient and carried the day. The election of 2012 looks like an amplified version of 2008.
This has provided a rather depressing picture of politics in this country. Polarization grows as people look to live in groups with people like themselves. The attributes they recognize as attractive to them also contribute to similar political views. The dynamics of such a homogeneous group is such that beliefs get reinforced and amplified. Conservatives become more conservative and liberals become more liberal. Those who should wander into these communities face pressure to conform or to move on. In an area dominated by a single party, the candidates who wish to represent the party mainly have faithfulness to party principles to argue over. This tends to favor the most extreme candidate and further exacerbates the polarization. And arguing over issues seems to have little effect on anyone’s opinion.
Bishop contributed this thought:
How does this all end? Can the political polarization be reversed? A cataclysmic event can jolt the system perhaps? The Great Recession only served to make matters worse.
Stay tuned. This can’t go on forever.
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