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MSNBC has just conducted a poll in which it asked people if they
thought opinion polls accurately reflected actual opinions. The
network informs us that 88 percent of those polled answered "no."
This sounds like a surreal joke, but then stories about contemporary
politics often do. There is no polite way to phrase this: when it
comes to politics, the average person is an idiot. Depressing evidence
for this claim can be found in a recent New Yorker essay by Louis
Menand, which surveys the political science literature regarding why
people vote the way they do. The conclusions from this literature
include:

� No more than 10 percent of the population can be said to have a
coherent political belief system, using even a loose definition of
that term. Most peoples' political beliefs, to the extent they have
any at all, suffer from a lack of what political scientists call
"constraint," i.e., little or no logical connection exists between the
positions they hold. For example, a large proportion of voters see no
contradiction between being in favor of both lower taxes and increased
government services.

� Perhaps a quarter of all voters vote on the basis of factors that
have no "issue content" whatever. They vote for candidates who seem
likable, or optimistic, or for those whose campaign posters are
particularly eye-catching. According to Princeton political scientists
Christopher Achen and Larry Bartels, millions of voters in the 2000
presidential election based their votes on what the weather had been
like lately.

� Voters are remarkably bad at calculating their own self-interest,
even when their self-interest and their political beliefs coincide.
Bartels gives the following example. Only the richest 2 percent of
Americans pay estate taxes. Yet among people who believe that the rich
ought to pay more taxes, and who also believe that growing income
inequality is a bad thing, two-thirds also favor repeal of the estate
tax!

Menand observes that this sort of data helps explain the otherwise
puzzling fact "that the world's greatest democracy has an electorate
that continually 'chooses' to transfer more and more wealth to a
smaller and smaller fraction of itself."

Even if we ignore how many people have no coherent political beliefs,
or base their voting on irrational factors, the sheer ignorance of the
average American should take us aback. Seventy percent of Americans
can't identify their senators or their representatives. Around 30
million can't find the United States on a map.

Now consider that the upcoming presidential election will almost
certainly be decided by voters who have not yet decided for whom they
are going to vote (in 2000, 18 percent of voters made their decision
in the final two weeks of the campaign, and 5 percent - far more than
the decisive margin - made their decision on Election Day itself.)

It's safe to say that almost everyone who has been paying the
slightest bit of attention to national politics, and who has anything
resembling coherent political beliefs, has already decided what he or
she is going to do on Nov. 2, at least in regard to the presidential
election.

But the cold fact is that tens of millions of Americans don't fit that
description. They normally pay no attention to politics; whatever
political beliefs they do have tend to be wildly inconsistent; and
they base their votes on frankly irrational factors.

These are the crucial swing voters in the crucial swing states, who
will decide who should occupy the world's most powerful political
office for the next four years.

There is, of course, no reason to doubt that democracy "works."
Anyway, we are assured that it does by our elected leaders - and if
you can't trust them, who can you trust?



xponent

The X Percentile Maru

rob


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