Voter Apathy 2014: The Democrats’ Democrat Problem

thoughtone

Rising Star
Registered
source: U.S. News

Failing to get voters to the polls could prove costly for Democrats ... again

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What’s the Democrats’ biggest problem this year? President Barack Obama’s upside down approval ratings? The Republicans’ determination to focus the contest on the consistently unpopular (though still more favored than the GOP) Affordable Care Act? No, the Democrats biggest problem in the fall is … Democratic voters.

Obama’s surprisingly solid victory over Mitt Romney – along with the fact that Democrats have won a plurality of the presidential vote in five of the last six elections – spurred buzz that the GOP seems to have ceded to the Democrats chunks of the electorate that will play an increasingly important role in coming contests. The president beat Romney by 11 points among women, by 24 points among voters 24 and under, by 44 points among Hispanics and by 87 points among black voters, all while losing whites and senior citizens by double-digit margins.

But midterm America is a different animal than presidential America, and Democrats have to deal with the downside of their successful presidential coalition. Specifically, the parts of the Democratic base that are so important in presidential contests – especially unmarried women, young voters and minorities, or the “rising American electorate,” as pollsters call them – just don’t turn out without a presidential top of the ticket.

“It’s very clear that our most significant challenge is not the Koch Brothers, not ACA, but turnout,” says the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee’s Justin Barasky. As Obama told Democratic donors last week: “We have this congenital disease, which is in midterm elections we don’t vote at the same rates.”

A Democracy Corps poll of 2012 voters underscored the Democrats’ problem. While 72 percent of voters surveyed overall said they were “almost certain” to vote, that figure dropped to 64 percent among the rising American electorate and climbed to 79 percent of those outside that group. And while Democrats are in a statistical dead heat with the GOP on the generic congressional ballot – if the election were held today which party would you vote for? – they have an impressive 49-33 lead among those voters who cast ballots in 2012 but are likely to stay home in 2014. There’s a problem and an opportunity here, according to Democracy Corps’ Erica Seifert. The former is that “right now it does look a lot like 2010 among the rising American electorate. The opportunity is that unlike Republicans, Democrats have a lot of votes left on the table.”

Overall, while the rising American electorate made up 47.5 percent of those who voted in 2012, thanks to drop-offs it is expected to comprise less than 43 percent this November, according to the Voter Participation Center, a nonprofit, nonpartisan group that focuses on increasing the share of historically underrepresented voting groups. That’s nearly 22 million fewer voters. It’s scarcely an exaggeration to say that different countries sandwiched a pair of Obama victories around a historical drubbing of the Democrats by the GOP.

And this turnout roller coaster isn’t atypical. From 1964 to 2008, voter turnout fell 14 percent from presidential to nonpresidential years, according to the University of Maryland Baltimore County’s Thomas Schaller. And that dropoff comes from Democratic-leaning voters: Since 1992, voters under 45 have made up 48.6 percent of the House electorate in presidential years, but only 39.8 percent in midterms, according to figures compiled by The Cook Political Report’s David Wasserman. Similarly, over the last dozen years the nonwhite portion of the congressional electorate has been 25.6 percent in presidential years and 20.6 percent in nonpresidential years, according to Wasserman’s stats.

So what to do? “With respect to motivating people to come out to the polls, you have to have two pieces in the strategy,” according to Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen, a former House Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chairman. “One, you have to have a message that resonates with those voters and, second, you need to deliver that message to where the voters are.”

For Democrats, the message is focusing on middle-class pocketbook issues that especially resonate with the drop-off voters, like pay equity this week and the ongoing push to raise the minimum wage: Women make up two-thirds of all minimum wage workers in the country. The Democracy Corps poll released this week found that the issues that most ginned up intensity with unmarried women, for example, were the combination of pay equity and equal health insurance (think, too, of the GOP’s monomaniacal obsession with repealing Obamacare).

The other prong is ensuring that message gets to the right people. That’s why Democrats are investing in what Barasky calls “the largest, data-driven turnout operation Senate races have ever seen.” The committee plans to spend $60 million on its turnout effort, called the “Bannock Street Project.” By comparison that’s nearly nine times the $7 million the committee spent on turnout in 2010 (when, in the wake of the Citizens United decision, the committee invested heavily in television ads) and more than twice the amount it spent two years ago.

It’s an unprecedented attempt to fix the Democrats’ midterm turnout problem using the sophisticated data-mining and targeting techniques made famous by the Obama campaign two years ago.

Time will tell whether it will prove to be money well spent. Even if Democrats can fix their midterm problem, they’re defending seats in red states and face tough head winds in the sixth year of a presidency. But if nothing else, give Democrats credit for identifying their biggest problem and tackling it head on.
 

. . . the Democrats biggest problem in the fall is … Democratic voters . . .

. . . midterm America is a different animal than presidential America, and Democrats have to deal with the downside of their successful presidential coalition.


“It’s very clear that our most significant challenge is not the Koch Brothers, not ACA, but turnout,” says the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee’s Justin Barasky.




In short.


 
:smh:

Dems and liberal groups need to work every day and stop letting people think that any one election is the end goal.
If not for the Moral Monday rallies of the last year, I would have little faith in Dems even holding on here in NC.
 
Do you know any Dems who refuse to vote in the midterms? What reasons do they give?

Seriously, all my people (family, friends) vote in midterms. And they're all Dems. :)
 
Do you know any Dems who refuse to vote in the midterms? What reasons do they give?

Seriously, all my people (family, friends) vote in midterms. And they're all Dems. :)

Sheer ignorance. You would be surprised at how many people don't even realize there are midterm elections until Election Day, if then.
I don't think anyone out and out refuses, they just don't see it as a priority.
 
Do you know any Dems who refuse to vote in the midterms? What reasons do they give?

Seriously, all my people (family, friends) vote in midterms. And they're all Dems. :)

I know lots of people and districts where this is the norm. I agree with U.D., ignorance plays a large part, even sometimes at elections that the apathetic actually turn out. The reasons? - varied: none, to didn't know, to just not interested, to didn't know it was today or how important is was to come out.

I think we need a massive education/re-education campaign taken on by every civic organization that cares, every Church, every social group, etc., et al., addressing, teaching, re-socializing ours, or whatever one wants to call it -- about our responsibility to us and how important that "Box" is to taking care of that responsibility (whomever one believes is the one).


.
 
I know lots of people and districts where this is the norm. I agree with U.D., ignorance plays a large part, even sometimes at elections that the apathetic actually turn out. The reasons? - varied: none, to didn't know, to just not interested, to didn't know it was today or how important is was to come out.

I think we need a massive education/re-education campaign taken on by every civic organization that cares, every Church, every social group, etc., et al., addressing, teaching, re-socializing ours, or whatever one wants to call it -- about our responsibility to us and how important that "Box" is to taking care of that responsibility (whomever one believes is the one).


.

The way those groups and organizations turn up (I don't think I've ever actually used that phrase before) during presidential elections, they need to do so during mid terms.

And primaries. We always forget primaries.
 
So Democrats can't get their blind-following moronic idiot base to turn out in the same numbers Republicans can get their blind-following moronic idiot base to the polls.

A real travesty obviously.
 
So Democrats can't get their blind-following moronic idiot base to turn out in the same numbers Republicans can get their blind-following moronic idiot base to the polls.

A real travesty obviously.

So in other words, you are saying:

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/xufBCuir-eI" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
So in other words, you are saying:

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/xufBCuir-eI" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Actually, I was saying who cares, but you keep thinking you're different than the guy in the video.
 
:smh:

Dems and liberal groups need to work every day and stop letting people think that any one election is the end goal.
If not for the Moral Monday rallies of the last year, I would have little faith in Dems even holding on here in NC.

C/S 100%
Dave I live in Wake County, when I see campaign signs out her the Republicans have 10 signs to 1 Democratic. I'm like WTF. Wake County is a Democratic county. :smh: Mid terms is a bitch. :smh:
 
C/S 100%
Dave I live in Wake County, when I see campaign signs out her the Republicans have 10 signs to 1 Democratic. I'm like WTF. Wake County is a Democratic county. :smh: Mid terms is a bitch. :smh:

I live in Mecklenburg so you know we're a strong Dem county, especially in Charlotte (with the Republicans doing well in the suburban cities like Pineville). But Thom Tillis held his victory celebration in Charlotte and not somewhere he might actually win.
 

With only six months to go before the midterm elections:

A meta-narrative is emerging that the electoral landscape favors the GOP. Journalists, political strategists and talking heads across the political spectrum are regurgitating the pollster line that a majority of potential voters—especially the ever elusive “independent”—are leaning Republican in 2014. And polling data suggest that 18- to 29-year-olds aren’t interested in voting at all.

A recent Harvard University Institute of Politics survey found that less than 1 in 4 young Americans say they will “definitely be voting” this November.

Black and Latino millennials are said to be so disillusioned that they see no need to vote. They report that they’re even less likely—at a rate of 19 percent, compared with 27 percent of their white counterparts—to cast a ballot. By contrast, Republicans of every age are more enthusiastic about voting, with 44 percent saying they will definitely vote—compared with 35 percent of Democrats.

Conservative outlets appear to be celebrating: Townhall declared, “Millennials Leaving Democratic Party,” and Fox News’ website read, “Many Millennials May Sit Out Midterm Elections.”



In general, these predictions follow historic trends in which Democratic constituencies are more likely to vote during presidential elections, while constituencies that lean Republican are more reliable in off-year elections. But recent changes in voting patterns among young and minority voters leave the continuation of those trends in doubt.


In 2008 and 2012, young African Americans voted in larger percentages (pdf) than their white counterparts. And the percentage of black voters of all ages exceeded that of whites. So has any pollster bothered to ask why young black millennials are unenthusiastic about this election?


Perhaps it’s because despite historic social progress, when it comes to economics, African-American millennials are about as likely to trail behind their white counterparts as their forebears were during the Jim Crow era. According to research by the Economic Policy Institute, the minority unemployment rate—particularly that of young black high school and college graduates—is higher than that of whites, in good times and bad.


Despite the continued economic recovery, the unemployment rate of young white high school graduates currently sits at 19.4 percent, while the rate for young black graduates is 34.7 percent.


For young black college graduates the landscape is also bleak: Their unemployment rate is 13.1 percent, compared with 8 percent for their white counterparts.


The data from 2011 showed an underemployment rate of 42.6 percent for African Americans under the age of 25, and 32.6 percent for Hispanics. Only 24.5 percent of young whites were underemployed.





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Republicans continue to thwart economic recovery to discourage turnout
among young black and brown voters in the 2014 midterms.
Will it work?

In analyzing the polls and concluding that 2014 will belong to the GOP, the chattering class appears to think that millennials are becoming convinced by Republican characterizations of President Barack Obama as an ineffective leader who has failed on the economy.

But are they missing the point.

Republicans are winning, but on tactics—not ideas. The vicious, soulless and relentless war on hope and change has replaced straightforward conservative arguments for low taxes and smaller social welfare programs. Discouraging millennials and African Americans from voting is the major strategy in the Republican electoral playbook.


The GOP’s failure to compromise with Obama on everything that could improve the economy, infrastructure and education—and thereby improve prospects for the younger generation—has resulted in government shutdowns, debates over the debt ceiling, filibusters of commonsense gun control legislation, the defeat of a minimum wage bill and the stalemate over immigration reform.


It has also produced a tepid economic recovery that has left millions of Obama voters feeling that there is no recovery at all.


This is no coincidence. Republican leaders and their operatives have been betting on this very outcome. They intend to make Obama’s presidency a cautionary tale. Their aim is not only to win back political power in Congress and the White House but also to ensure that the generation of young black and brown Americans inspired by his ascendancy won’t aspire to similar heights.


With the mainstream media asleep at the wheel, recycling Republican talking points and not looking deeper to see the reasons for youth malaise, the GOP is clearly accomplishing its goal.


But Obama and Democrats aren’t ceding the midterms quite yet.


Kelly Ward, executive director of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, says, “We are working aggressively to increase turnout among African-American and Latino millennials in this midterm, particularly with an early field effort. Our field team of diverse young men and women not only reflects their communities, but they’re also working to get young people engaged in the critical issues that affect their lives.”


The Harvard IOP survey showed that the president’s own approval rating among young people jumped to 47 percent, up from 41 percent last November. Young voters also agreed with Democrats on issues such as raising the minimum wage, closing the gender gap in pay and addressing income inequality. But the constant rancor in our political discourse—driven by Republican opposition to this first African-American president—has left millennials distrusting the political process.


If the Republican Party succeeds come November, it will have found a new systematic way to disenfranchise voters—not through violence, poll taxes or purging voter rolls -- but through apathy.



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http://www.theroot.com/articles/pol...p_efforts_to_deflate_obama_s_coalition.3.html
 
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