THE COOK REPORT
Memo to the GOP: Independent Voters Are Required to Win the  General 
Election

by _Charlie  Cook_ (http://www.nationaljournal.com/reporters/bio/2)  
Updated: August 19, 2011 | 11:30  a.m. 
August 19, 2011 | 6:00 a.m. 

 
The 2012 presidential election is shaping up to be one of  oddest in memory 
and potentially far more dramatic than one might guess.   Obviously, the 
general election is still more than 14 months away -- and, in  politics, and 
for that matter anything involving human behavior, predictions are  
dangerous. But the dynamics that seem to be emerging are  fascinating.

 
On one hand, we have an incumbent president with dismally low  job-approval 
ratings; his signature legislative accomplishment of health care  reform 
remains very unpopular, and he is presiding over an enormously weak and  
worsening economy. This is a combination sufficiently bad to prevent any  
president's reelection. 
On the other hand, we have an opposing party whose center of  gravity and 
energy levels have swung so far to one side of the ideological  spectrum as 
to have been designed to alienate the independent and swing voters,  the 
people who will effectively decide this presidential election. To put it  more 
simply, this election is the Republican Party’s to lose, and yet, they may  
pull it off, snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. 
It’s hard to argue with the proposition that President Obama is  extremely 
weak heading into his reelection campaign.  Though presidential  
job-approval ratings don’t begin taking on predictive value until about a year  
before 
the actual election, his 40 percent Gallup job-approval rating for the  week 
ending July 14, with 52 percent disapproving, is not good.  Although  74 
percent of Democrats approve the job he is doing, among independent voters, a  
group he carried by 8 percentage points in 2008, just 36 percent approve; 
among  Republicans, only 9 percent approve.  
In the end, upwards of 90 percent of Democrats will likely end  up voting 
for Obama just as more than 90 percent of Republicans will end up  opposing 
him; it’s that independent group that will likely make up all the  
difference.  Americans are known to vote their pocketbooks, and the economy  is 
almost 
inevitably the dominant issue. The August 11-14 Gallup Poll that got  all 
the attention (the one that showed that only 26 percent of Americans  
approved the job Obama was doing handling the economy) indicated that his  
approval 
rating among independents on handling the economy was just 23  percent—on 
creating jobs, 24 percent. Those are ugly poll numbers, consistent  with a 
president losing reelection.  Yes, President Reagan had some awful  
job-approval numbers in the first half of 1983. but by this point they had  
turned up 
above where Obama is today and didn’t drop to this level for the  duration 
of his reelection campaign. In short, Reagan had already turned the  corner 
by now. 
Then look at the economy itself.  The latest Blue Chip  Economic Indicators 
survey of top economists paints a gruesome economic  background for the 
unfolding campaign. Keeping in mind that the economy, as  measured by gross 
domestic product, needs to grow at an annual rate of at least  3 percent to 
create any meaningful net new jobs, the Blue Chip survey shows a  consensus 
forecast of GDP growth of just 1.8 percent for calendar year 2011 and  2.5 
percent for 2012.  Indeed, the forecast for the third and fourth  quarters of 
next year are just 2.8 and 2.9 percent. Unemployment for this  calendar year 
is expected to average 9 percent; 8.7 percent for next year, 8.7  and 8.5 
percent for the third and fourth quarters of next year. So looking  through a 
telescope just at Obama and his reelection prospects, it would be easy  to 
conclude that he is likely to be a one-term president. 
But after spending almost a week in Iowa watching  the debate and the 
Republican contenders traverse the Hawkeye State, one can  easily conclude that 
Republican candidates have decided that there will be no  independent or 
moderate voters casting ballots in November 2012 and that the  party of 
Presidents Eisenhower, Nixon, Ford, George H.W. Bush, and even Reagan  (who 
raised 
the debt limit 18 times and, yes, went along with a number of tax  increases) 
no longer exists.  That Republican Party would seem well poised  to win 
under these circumstances. The contemporary descendants of that party  would 
include former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former Utah Gov. Jon  
Huntsman as well as former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty—who dropped out of the  
race after a distant third place showing in the Iowa Straw Poll behind Reps.  
Michele Bachmann of Minnesota and Ron Paul of Texas.  A candidate 
representing that  legacy GOP tradition would seem to be very well positioned 
to take 
advantage of  the lousy economy and disillusionment with Obama.  But whether 
Bachmann; or  Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who entered the race the day of the 
straw poll and didn’t  officially compete; or Paul, who was narrowly edged out 
in the balloting by  Bachmann, can win-- hmm, this could be a very 
interesting race and more  competitive than it ought to be. Most would agree 
that 
Paul, who turns 76 this  week, is more of a cause than a real candidacy, 
advocating an agenda that is  more libertarian than conservative. But the fact 
that he fares so well in  various straw polls around the country just 
reinforces the argument that the  base of the GOP has somewhat more exotic 
points of 
view than most relatively  centrist or nonideological independent voters. 
Indeed with the Republican Party moving as far right as it has,  probably 
two-thirds of its members could be legitimately described as either tea  
party very, very conservative on social and cultural issues, the turf that 
Perry 
 and Bachmann occupy. That is where both the mass and the energy of the 
party  are. But can someone from that most conservative two-thirds of the GOP 
win those  swing voters who reside between the 40-yard lines? 
At some point in this process, Republican voters are going to  have to 
choose between their hearts and their heads. Do they want to nominate  someone 
who projects the dominate philosophy, energy, and spirit of the party  and 
run a high risk of losing, or do they go with their heads, compromising  (yes, 
that dirty word) that energy and go with someone who might win a majority  
of the independent votes? 
It was easy to dismiss former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as a  lightweight, 
but Perry and Bachmann are not so easily dismissed. Whether either  are your 
cup of tea or not, both are clearly people with formidable political  skills, 
and either one could capture that zeitgeist that exists in the GOP. Both  
have very visible shortcomings, but one of them could very well end up as the 
 Republican nominee.  
Now, that would be a hell of a presidential  election.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to