Dear all,
Some very interesting questions are thought through in this
Christopher Shea article in Salon on voters' brain-deadness and
democracy.  It would be very interesting to look at the electoral
studies conducted by CSDS from this light.

Cheers,
Pranesh

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<http://www.salon.com/books/it/1999/11/22/voter/print.html>

salon.com > Books Nov. 22, 1999
URL: http://www.salon.com/books/it/1999/11/22/voter

Is voter ignorance killing democracy?

Some political scientists say it is; others maintain that a brain-dead
populace does no damage to our hallowed political system.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Christopher Shea

Is the American public too ignorant for democracy to work? That's not
intended as a smarmy, elitist question. It is, in fact, one that
political scientists take very seriously.

While the press corps has been clucking over George W. Bush's
inability to name the general behind the coup in Pakistan, a
potentially bigger story has gone unnoticed: Many Americans barely
know who the leaders of their own country are. One of the dirty little
secrets of public-opinion research is the jaw-dropping apathy and
general boneheadedness of the electorate.

A poll by the nonprofit Pew Research Center, released in September,
gently touched on this issue. The poll showed that 56 percent of
Americans could not name a single Democratic candidate for president.
Things weren't better for the Republicans: Only 63 percent could
recall the name "Bush." (It's a fair bet, moreover, that some of the
people who came up with George W.'s name were thinking of his father.)

Howard Kurtz, the Washington Post media critic, declared the Pew
results "stunning." He and others suggested, however, that there was
something special about this year's race that was boring voters.
(Insert your own Gore joke here.)

Yet one of the most consistent findings of public-opinion research is
that the majority of Americans have long found politics about as
exciting as a PBS documentary on the great crested grebe -- and they
pay a corresponding amount of attention to it. Consider the following,
drawn from an almost endless number of examples that political
scientists have turned up over the years: One month after the
Republican revolution in 1994, in which conservatives, led by Newt
Gingrich, finally took control of the House of Representatives, 57
percent of the electorate did not know who Gingrich was. Despite
massive coverage in every newspaper in the country, and on every news
program, the vast majority had never heard of the Contract with
America. On a typical election day, 56 percent of Americans can't name
a single candidate in their own district, for any office.

Nor is this a new development or the product of young minds warped by
MTV. In 1964, at the height of the Cold War, only 38 percent of
Americans could say for sure whether the Soviet Union was a member of
NATO. Most had no idea that the United States was pledged to go to war
if West Germany was invaded. It's not just the people who don't vote
who are uninformed, either -- not that that would exactly be
reassuring. Only a tiny sliver of active voters show even passing
familiarity with the kinds of policy debates that elites take for
granted.

When the public does have "opinions," moreover, they are often
self-contradictory. It's well known, for example, that Americans hate
Big Government. But, at the same time, most Americans also think the
state should spend more on just about every public program you can
name, except for welfare. Lest you think it is only ugly Americans who
can't think straight, polls show that the sophisticated,
government-fetishizing French are just as out of it.

The subject of voter ignorance was first explored in depth by
political scientists in the 1950s and 1960s, but it has inspired a
fresh wave of scholarship in the past decade. The scholarly journal
Critical Review, in fact, devoted its entire fall 1998 issue to it --
a nice kickoff to the current presidential race. The topic of voter
ignorance "is so important," wrote the journal's editor, Jeffrey
Friedman, in an introductory essay, "that if we were to focus on it
intently, it would overturn our understanding of politics."

Friedman points out that almost all talk about public affairs assumes
that citizens follow politics closely. When Ronald Reagan was elected,
most pundits saw it as an across-the-board mandate for the
conservative agenda, a massive lurch rightward. Clinton's victory was
then characterized as a shift back to the center. Clinton's surviving
the impeachment was a sign to many that the American public had lost
its moral compass. In fact, however, most people base their votes, and
their answers to polls, on only the vaguest feelings about how the
economy, or life, is treating them.

Clearly, voter ignorance poses problems for democratic theory:
Politicians, the representatives of the people, are being elected by
people who do not know their names or their platforms. Elites are
committing the nation to major treaties and sweeping policies that
most voters don't even know exist.

One side product of voter ignorance is a gap between what the press
writes about campaigns and what people want, or need, to know.
Political journalists travel on buses and planes with candidates and
shmooze all day with their staffs. The nose-to-the-glass perspective
leads to lots of front page stories about which campaign aide is up or
down in his boss's eye, who among the staff are feuding, and who
dresses the candidate. "The stuff that never filters down to voters is
the inside-the-campaign stuff -- stories about why they are running
one kind of ad, as opposed to another," says Larry Bartels, a
professor at Princeton University who has studied uninformed voters.
He has found that incumbents get a 5-percentage-point boost from voter
ignorance, because the fallback position of uninformed voters is to
pull the lever for a name they've at least heard of.

Awareness of just how uninformed voters are should lead us to take
polls with a grain of salt, Bartels notes. At this early point, the
opinions on which they are based are so thin that the results are
close to meaningless. (The polls can, however, assume a life of their
own: People will start to form real opinions based on the dubious
early polls -- and will jump on the Bush bandwagon, for instance.)

Some scholars say their own views of campaigns changed when they
started studying voter ignorance. "You often see the press and pundits
saying that some small statement by a candidate will have a profound
effect on how people perceive him," says Ilya Somin, a graduate
student in government at Harvard University, who contributed an essay
to the Critical Review forum. "I'm not saying that never happens, but
I'm more skeptical. Most statements candidates make are not noticed by
most voters. The candidates and their staffs may understand that, but
the press may not."

In an attempt to avoid the elitist overtones of voter-ignorance
theory, a number of political scientists have labored to show how
democracy manages to limp along despite rampant cluelessness. They
have offered several "solutions." It may be, some have said, that
people use rough rules of thumb to guide their decisions. Workers
might not understand debates over interest rates or monetary policy,
but they vote for incumbents whenever their bank balance is high. Or
it's been years since they followed politics, but they've trusted the
Democrats since Truman's day, and always vote for them. Or they might
follow the lead of the handful of people in their circle who do
monitor politics -- that loudmouth at the country club, say, or the
union foreman. These might not actually be terrible ways of making
decisions that line up with your own self-interest, some researchers
assert.

On a more technical note, some academics argue that a phenomenon
called the "miracle of aggregation" sweeps in at the end of the day to
save democracy. Many voters are ignorant, this line of thinking goes,
but the ignorance is distributed randomly across the political
spectrum. Therefore -- here's the miracle -- only the votes of the
informed end up making a difference. Plenty of questions remain about
this theory, such as: Why assume that ignorance leads to random
decision-making? Maybe elites, demagogues or the press can sway
uninformed voters in one direction, thereby drowning out the votes of
the informed minority.

Scholars diverge on how significant voter ignorance is, but few take
as apocalyptic a view as Harvard's Somin. He argues, in his Critical
Review essay, that the combination of uninformed voters and -- this is
his own twist on the debate -- the sheer size of government is proving
fatal for democracy. Voters have a hard enough time remembering the
candidates' names and their parties, in his view; they simply have no
idea what's going on in the government's 14 cabinet-level departments
and 57 regulatory agencies -- or how the trillions of dollars in the
budget are being spent.

Since people can't expand their brains, Somin proposes shrinking the
state -- turning back the clock, in effect, to the 19th century. In
the 1800s, he argues, the American government handled only a few key
issues, including war and peace, slavery, territorial expansion and
federal banking policies. Typically, only one of these issues moved to
the front burner at any given time. The public, therefore, was able to
wrap its collective mind around each one as it came along, processing
extremely complicated arguments. Witness, he says, the Lincoln-Douglas
debates on slavery. (A skeptic might point out, however, that we don't
have any evidence that the public understood Lincoln's and Douglas'
arguments any better than it does NAFTA.)

It may be that asking whether democracy works well is the wrong
question. A better one is whether democracy prevents the worst sort of
governmental abuse and oppression. Here the political scientists' view
is more hopeful: Politicians' knowledge that the many-headed monster
can be roused if the state steps too far out of line may be enough to
keep the leaders in check.

This isn't exactly a civics-textbook view of democracy. But thinking
along these lines might bring us closer to understanding how our
democracy actually functions -- how it works in the real world, not in
Rousseau or Locke. That people feel free to follow football instead of
Bill Bradley's health-care proposals may be a sign that things could
be a lot worse than they are. That the press writes about Gore's earth
tones and Bradley's spare tire shows that it, too, doesn't think
there's all that much to worry about. (That's a whole lot less
excusable, given that so much of the press's self-definition involves
fostering an engaged citizenry.) Of course, such sunny hypotheses
elide the other darker possibility.

Smug complacency could also be a sign that the public and the press
are being duped into thinking things are swell when they aren't. For
activists and politicos, the lesson is probably that you can make all
the careful, lucid arguments you want, but you have to catch people's
attention first. And that, to say the least, is an uphill battle.
salon.com | Nov. 22, 1999

-- 
Pranesh Prakash
Programme Manager
Centre for Internet and Society
W: http://cis-india.org | T: +91 80 40926283

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