November 03, 2004
Democratic Voter Delusions
By
Michelle Malkin
Despite apocalyptic claims of
systemic voter suppression, upwards of 120 million
Americans were
able to navigate traffic,
traverse bad weather, find their polling places, stand
in line without fainting, elbow their way past
United Nations nosybodies and
MoveOn.org mobsters, press their trembling fingers
onto
computer screens without getting shocked,
and—gasp—competently cast their votes without
tearfully begging for do-overs.
The projected turnout is up 15
million from the record set four years ago. With more
than half the popular vote, President Bush has topped
Bill Clinton and
Ronald Reagan’s popular vote tallies. He will earn
the distinction of being the presidential candidate who
has earned more votes than any other in the nation’s
entire history. “W.” stands for “Wow!”
All this and yet, the plaintive
Democratic wail until at least
Thanksgiving will be: “If only more people had
voted…”
This isn’t just sore-loser-ism. It’s
delusion-ism.
How many times did you hear
pollsters, pundits, journalists, and Democratic
mouthpieces (sorry for the redundancy) say that
“turnout will be key” to a Kerry/Edwards
victory? Let’s review.
When it became clear that this week’s
election would have record turnout, it was widely
assumed in the mainstream media that John Kerry would
benefit. Pollster John Zogby prognosticated:
"If there's a big turnout, especially of young voters,
you may be looking at a Kerry victory.” An
outfit called the National Committee for an Effective
Congress
opined: “Presidential election [turnout] is
expected to be nearly 50% and higher turnout benefits
Democrats.” Marring an otherwise stellar record of
predictions, Larry Sabato of the University of
Virginia's Center for Politics in Charlottsville, Va.,
observed:
“That many new people are not showing up to say 'Good
job, Mr. President.'”
Whoops.
It has long been
conventional wisdom that nonvoters tend to be liberal,
and that getting more people to the polls would be
better for Democrats than for Republicans. As social
scientists Gerald Wright and Jeanette Morehouse noted,
the basis for this logic goes back at least to the
formation of the New Deal coalition, where the
Democratic Party was able to achieve majority status
nationally by expanding its former base in the South to
include the poor, unemployed, and urban ethnic voters.
The implicit assumption has been that modern nonvoters,
like their
New Deal counterparts, remain disproportionately
poor, non-white, and predisposed to vote for the
Democrats. [Verifying
the Common Wisdom: Nonvoters Would Be More Democratic,
[MS
Word Document]]
Serious academic research on
nonvoters, however, has provided resoundingly little
hard evidence in support of this outdated conventional
media/pundit/hack view. When nonvoters are asked how
they would have voted if they had gotten to the polls,
their answers are a mixed bag. In 2000, for example,
nonvoters were no more likely to approve of Democrats
than voters. Analysis of the partisan effects of voter
turnout after passage of the
Motor Voter law showed that Democratic benefits were
not statistically significant.
And now, we have Election 2004—which
should put the high turnout-helps-Democrats myth to rest
once and for all. Take Missouri, where voter
registration was up 10 percent from 2000. President Bush
won by a whopping 8-point margin. Take Florida, where
black and Hispanic turnout was higher than expected—and
where President Bush won by a convincing 5-point margin.
Or, on a related note, consider the
fizzled youth vote: Fewer than one in 10 voters were 18
to 24, roughly the same proportion of the electorate as
in 2000. The MTV vote windfall for Democrats failed to
materialize even after Herculean efforts by
Ramen noodle-wielding
Michael Moore, Bush-bashing
Eminem, scare-mongering
Cameron Diaz, fist-pumping P. Diddy, and “Vote or
Die!”-vamping
Christina Aguilera. (Interestingly, exit polls
showed that “morals” was one of the top issues among the
youth vote. Go figure that one out,
Britney and
Leonardo.)
Desperately clinging to the disabused
notion that those at the bottom of the electoral barrel
would have broken universally for Kerry, Democrats in
denial will now blame computers, the
Swift Boat Veterans, the rain, the heat, surfing
conditions, sinister bus schedules, and conspiratorial
bloggers for helping to “suppress” elusive
nonvoters.
“If only more people had voted,”
the turnout hallucinators
will moan. Be careful what you wish for.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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