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Committee for the
Study of the American Electorate Post-Election News Release
November 8, 2002

NOTES: The folloing
post-election news release from the Committee for The Study of the
American Electorate will be updated by the CSAE after there are
more complete figures for states, notably in the west.
Beginning with this report and in all ensuing
reports CSAE will be using a different denominator for the analysis
of turnout. This denominator is more accurate because it eliminates
non-citizens which were included in the old denominator. A full
explanation of why this denominator is being used and why it is
preferable to others which have been suggested is included in Note 2
in the notes section of this report. CSAE will for some time be
providing charts based on the old Voting Age Population and the new
one in its reports.

FOR RELEASE: November 8, 2002
IMMEDIATE
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: Curtis Gans
(202) 546-3221 (703) 478-1943
TURNOUT MODESTLY HIGHER DEMOCRATS IN DEEP DOO-DOO
MANY QUESTIONS EMERGE
WASHINGTON, November 8 -- Fueled by grass-roots
mobilization efforts in some hotly contested races, voter turnout
increased modestly and likely temporarily in the 2002 mid-term
election.
When final and official results are completed early
next month, it is likely that an estimated 78.7 million citizens
cast their ballots in the 2002 mid-term. Turnout, when the numbers
finally are certified, will be 39.3 percent of eligible citizens, up
modestly (1.7 percentage points) from the 37.6 percent who voted in
1998. About 121 million citizens did not cast ballots. Turnout went
up in 31 states, but declined in 19 states and the District of
Columbia, including some in some hotly contested statewide races.
Only one state, Florida, had a record high turnout. Seven states set
record lows.
Democratic turnout declined. Republican turnout
increased modestly.
These are among the findings of a report on voter
turnout and registration released today by the Committee for the
Study of the American Electorate, a non-partisan, non-profit
research organization based in Washington. The report is based on
vote tabulation figures provided by the Associated Press at the
close of its running of those figures Wednesday afternoon, November
6 and registration figures from 34 states and the District of
Columbia which are final and official and provided by the chief
election officer in each state. The vote tabulation figures are
likely to be close to the final certified results, except in the
three west coast states who were, at the time of this release, still
counting substantial numbers of absentee and mail ballots and Texas
whose tabulated results were only 90 percent complete.
The Turnout Story:
Among the other findings in this report:
The largest turnout increases were largely
concentrated in states with high-profile close contests and where
the candidates, parties and interest groups put unprecedented
resources into the campaign, in general, and greater resources than
in recent elections into grass-roots get-out-the-vote efforts. The
greatest increases occurred in Tennessee (up 15.0 percentage
points), which did not have a statewide election of consequence in
1998 but had high profile races for both Senator and governor this
year, followed by New Hampshire (12.1), South Dakota (12.0) and
Louisiana (8.0). Minnesota had the highest turnout (61.4 percent of
eligible citizens), followed by South Dakota (61.3), Maine (50.6)
and Vermont (50.0).
Turnout also declined in many states which had tight
and expensive races. Turnout declined in California (an estimated
8.0 percentage points), Alaska (an estimated 6.5 percentage points),
Colorado (5.6), Hawaii (4.5), Arizona (3.0), Wyoming (2.2),
Wisconsin (1.2) and South Carolina (1.1) all of which had at least
one race whose likely outcome was not clear until no earlier than
the final week of the campaign.
Only one state, Florida at 42.9 percent of
citizen-eligibles voting, set a new record high. Fully seven states
California (at an estimated 31.5 percent of citizen-eligibles
voting), Arizona (27.1), Colorado (40.2), Indiana (34.1), Montana
(49.5), Nebraska (38.1) and New Mexico (39.4) set record lows.
The Republicans clearly outorganized the Democrats.
Democratic turnout was down 1.3 percentage points or 7.7 percent
from 16.4 percent in 1998 to 15.1 this year on the basis of
aggregate House of Representatives vote. Republican turnout was up
0.5 percentage points in House races to 17.2 percent of
citizen-eligibles in 2002 from 16.7 in 1998. (The Democratic deficit
will diminish slightly and Republican gains will increase when final
and official results are in).
Based on aggregate House turnout, the Democrats drew
fewer voters than in 1998 in every region except the South. When
final results are in, the Republicans will likely have gained in the
South, New England, and the Middle Atlantic states; held their own
in the farm and industrial midwest and lost only in the west.
The only regions in the nation in which the Democrats
outpolled the Republicans were the far west and New England.
This election marks the third straight mid-term
election (beginning in 1994) where the GOP has outpolled the
Democrats in aggregate House of Representatives vote. Prior to 1994,
the last time the GOP had done that was 1946.
While turnout was modestly up, overall turnout, based
on the votes for the race or races receiving the highest number of
votes is down more than 20 percent (10 percentage points since its
apex of 49.3 in 1966). Democratic turnout is down 30.8 percent (8
percentage points) from its apex of 26.2 in 1962. Republican turnout
is down 23.9 percent (6.3 percentage points) from is 26.4 percent
apex in 1966.
(NOTE: Normally in its reports CSAE lists the various
high and low levels for overall and partisan turnout and increases
and decreases in these categories between the last election and
this. But because there are substantial numbers of votes still to be
counted, as of this writing, particularly in the west, these
rankings are tentative and subject to change. In Section IV of this
report, the charts on turnout based on highest state vote, there are
rankings and differences which may be used with caution. Similarly
in Section VI on House races, there are regional and partisan
analyses that may be used. Normally also in its reports, CSAE’Äôs
director, Curtis Gans, makes quotation marked commentaries
throughout the report. In this report, these are saved for the
analysis section below.)
The Registration Story:
Final registration figures from 34 states and the
District of Columbia essentially corroborate the registration story
CSAE released last week:
Registration is likely, when all numbers are in, to be
down slightly from 64.6 percent of Voting Age Population to 64.1
percent this year. About 136.5 million Americans will likely have
registered.
Democratic registration is down 1.8 percentage points
to 30.4 percent of VAP in the 18 states and the District of Columbia
which require partisan registration and have reported as of this
writing, marking the ninth straight mid-term election in which
Democratic registration has fallen. Democratic registration is down
34.5 percent (16 percentage points) from its 47.4 percent high in
1966 and has fallen in every region of the nation except New England
where it has risen.
Republican registration held about constant between
1998 and 2002 (22.6 percent of VAP in 2002 in these states and 22.8
in 1998). Since the mid-1960's, however, GOP registration has
increased nearly two-fold in the South while declining about 25
percent in the rest of the country.
Registration for third parties and independents has
increased in these states by 1.6 percentage points from 15.8 in 1998
to 17.4 in 2002.
This also marks the ninth consecutive mid-term
election in which registering for neither major party has increased.
The increase has been more than four-fold since the 1960's.
(Note: As this went to press CSAE received
registration figures for one other state, listed in Section VII of
this report which changes the absolute numbers above, as they will
change with every succeeding state report, but the trend lines are
not likely to.)
Analysis:
There are two major points of analysis that fall
within CSAE’Äôs bailiwick about turnout and about the political
parties. A few words about each.
Turnout:
It would be nice to be able to say that with modest
turnout increases in both 2000 and 2002 that the nation had turned
the corner on turnout decline. It would also be wrong.
There is a glass half-full and half-empty story to be
told about both elections. The half-full story is simple: there was
a modest turnout increase in both 2002 and 2000. That increase was,
in large part, caused by something that had almost been seen as
extinct grassroots mobilizing and get-out-the vote activity in key
states. And while the budgets for such activity in both parties in
both elections did not come close to rivalling the moneys poured
into political advertising, any commitment to personal contact
activity is a welcome change.
But turnout is still more than 20 percent lower than
it was in the 1960's and more than 25 percent lower, if one takes
out the south which has experienced a rise in turnout because of the
1965 Voting Rights Act, the enfranchisement of African-Americans and
real two-party competition. And, in this election, the turnout
decline in 40 percent of the states, including many with highly
competitive races, does not speak to a healthy return of civic and
political vitality.
Turnout was slightly up in these two elections because
of the extraordinary circumstances surrounding both the
extraordinarily close (and advertised in poll after poll as so) 2000
Presidential election and the similarly close contest for control of
both houses of Congress this year, both of which mandated
extraordinary tactical grassroots measures for both parties in both
elections.
But the underlying fact remains that the electorate
is, by a more than 60 percent majority in mid-term elections and by
nearly 50 percent in Presidential elections, largely disengaged from
politics and that even in this election, as seen in the turnout
figures for many states, that percentage is growing.
Many of the factors contributing to this are long-term
the decline in trust in public officials fostered by their own
high-profile conduct; the decreased coverage and increased cynicism
in that coverage by major television outlets; the decline in the
quality of education and the quantity of civic education within it;
the fragmenting and atomizing effects of suburbanization, decline of
community, single issue and identity politics and, most profoundly,
by television, cable, satellite and the Internet; the erosion in
strength of the major integrating institutions schools, churches,
unions and political parties; and the move to self-seeking,
anti-goverment, libertarian and consumerist values, to name but a
few.
But at least one additional factor was evident in this
campaign--the execrable conduct of our campaigns through the
overwhelming use of attack and comparative advertising. One cannot
explain why tight campaigns in South Carolina (two), Arizona,
Colorado, Wyoming and Alaska would depress turnout without looking
at the quality of those campaigns on the airwaves. One cannot
explain why the close Senatorial race in Colorado not only depressed
turnout in that state but ran behind the more one-sided and less
negative campaign for governor unless one looks at the volume and
virulence of the advertising campaign. Charles Krauthammer once
wrote that American Airlines does not advertise on behalf of itself
on the basis that Delta kills more people in crashes. Politics is
the only industry that regularly and overwhelmingly denigrates its
product. And by so doing, undermines real dialogue about issues,
erodes respect for all leadership and drives citizens to the
sidelines.
There will be no permanent reversal of the four-decade
turnout decline unless and until we address the larger causal issues
and also cease being one of the only democracies in the world which
does not address the issue of political advertising as a matter of
public policy.
Parties:
There are two stories from this year’Äôs figures one
relating to the two-party system as a whole, the other, to the
Democratic Party in particular.
For the better part of a decade CSAE has been
highlighting in its reports the decaying state of the Democratic
Party the continuing disinclination of citizens to identify
themselves through registration with the party, the decline in the
percentage of citizens who show up in the party’Äôs primaries, the
equal erosion in their share of the Congressional vote, the loss of
offices on every level in the nation. This is the year that the
chickens came to roost, at least temporarily.
In the first election since the mid-1930s, a sitting
President and his party, in the midst of an economic downturn,
actually gained seats in the Senate, the House of Representatives,
the state legislatures and avoided losing the majority of
governorships the GOP has enjoyed since the anti-Clinton election of
1994.
This is a direct result of the nearly four-decade
failure of the Democratic Party to put forward ideas, programs and
messages commensurate with a major party seeking to govern the most
powerful nation on earth. For two decades after the 1960's, their
dominant advocacy was identity politics (advocating the rights of
inclusion of specific demographic sub-groups in American society)
and when that failed spectacularly in 1984, they have propelled
themselves sideways and backwards by consultant and poll, by the
’Äúsmart’Äù politics of positioning themselves just to the left of the
rightward drift of the Republican party but without a coherent,
affirmative and durable outlook. They have essentially been ’Äúnot
Rapoport.’Äù
But their lack of idealism has lost them the young,
whose allegiance they had enjoyed from the 1930s through the early
1970s. Their lack of evident and continuing commitment to the
concerns of those at the bottom of the income scale has led to the
withdrawal of the poor from the political process. Minorities now
feel taken for granted and the one thing that unites Democrats and
differentiates them from their opposition the belief in the ability
of popular government to act in the interests of the general welfare
is almost totally absent from their advocacy.
Back in 1998, CSAE’Äôs director coined the term ’Äúa
Seinfeld election, an election about nothing’Äù to describe that
election. Several commentators have used that term with respect to
this election. But they are wrong. The GOP, in many ways, defined
this election. They hid their major weakness the uncertain and
perhaps eroding economy and played to their strengths the battle
against terrorism, potential war with Iraq, mainstream American
values and the popularity of the President. They recruited, in many
crucial elections, mainstream candidates and tempered their more
extreme advocacy. Against which the Democrats offered little or
nothing. They tried to make the economy an issue, but offered no
program on it or, largely, anything else, except issues which
appealed to seniors. As a result the GOP was able to mobilize its
troops in large numbers and the Democrats were not. And, at least to
a limited extent in a still divided country, the Republicans have a
modest mandate.
This leaves the Democrats in a difficult position.
For, if they proceed as they have been proceeding over the last few
years offering modest programs and fighting only on the excesses of
Republican policy and advocacy but letting things go through like
the upper class parts of the President’Äôs tax cut they will likely
again be perceived as the party without message. If they define a
program and perspective and fight vigorously for it even from their
minority position, they may be characterized as the obstructionists
that produced a do-nothing Congress. But after a period in which
their very lack of definition has cost them, the Democrats might
choose the bolder course. The adage is you can’Äôt beat something with
nothing and this year the Democrats proved it.
Which is not to say that the GOP is without its
challenges. They will be seen as solely responsible for the next two
years of governance and what transpires during that period. They
face three specific dangers the ’ÄúGingrich factor,’Äù foreign policy
hubris and the potential for a decaying economy. In 1994 when the
Republicans were catapulted to power because of strong anti-Clinton
feeling, particularly in the South, the new Speaker of the House,
Newt Gingrich interpreted the GOP landslide of that year as a
positive mandate for things erosion of environmental protection,
action to curtail reproductive rights, among many others which were
wildly unpopular and led to a substantial reversal in the GOP
fortunes in 1996. That could happen again unless the Republicans are
careful about what aspects of their agenda they choose to put
forward. The newly minted muscular and interventionist approach of
the Bush Administration to international affairs could both isolate
the United States from the world community and strain domestic
resources. And the economy’Äôs problems, left unaddressed, could bring
down this Administration despite its present popularity.
Which is also to say that the key figure in this
report, particularly with respect to registration, is the growing
number of citizens who, through their registration, are saying ’Äúa
pox on both your houses.’Äù This ever-growing group of citizens is not
presently a coherent force, but should the two major parties
continue to act as they have during large parts of the last decade
and given appropriate leadership, the realignment that could occur
might be active rather than the growing number of Americans sitting
on the sidelines.
Two minor points:
1. Exit Polls:
It is tempting to say that the total failure of Voter
News Service to provide exit poll information in this election
couldn’Äôt have happened to a better bunch of people. Their past
arrogance surpasseth understanding.
But, this election is the first in many years in which
we have virtually no information on which demographic groups turned
out and for whom and which party, because exit polls were the
primary source of that information. And we don’Äôt have any
information about why people voted the way they did.
The problem for many years has been the abuse of these
very useful devices in order to declare winners as quickly as
possible. In close elections like that of 2000, it leads to
sufficient error that not only is the public getting bad information
but it can actually affect, as it did in 2000, voting decisions
during the election and political perceptions after. In one-sided
elections, it leads to national declarations while citizens are
still voting depressing the late vote and the for those who vote
late, the will to vote; according to the large preponderance of
evidence, possibly affecting the outcomes of elections below the
level of the one projected and undermining the integrity of the
process.
The networks did not do very well in their coverage of
this year’Äôs election. They didn’Äôt issue any wrong proclamations
about winners. But they also didn’Äôt report the real news of the
night--the tabulated vote count--and thus their broadcasts lacked
any coherence, drama or real reportage. But, if they went back to
reporting that news and not their polling contrivances for declaring
winners the actual vote count comes in at a sufficiently glacial
pace so that they would never get it wrong and they would never be
able to declare winners while citizens are still voting. And, those
of us in the research community would be able to fully defend exit
polls for the useful information they provide about the shape of the
electorate and the citizens’Äô reasons for voting the way they did.
2. The Perils of Prognostication:
Each year at its end my friend, David Broder, writes a
column about his errors the previous year. Last week, I produced a
report which did not have any factual errors, but should suggest
that immediate prognostication in this election was not my strong
suit. I said correctly that turnout would be within two percentage
points up or down of what it was in 1998. But then I went on to say
how an increase in turnout would benefit the Democrats; Wrong! How
they would likely be smiling more with respect to the Senate and
governorships; Wrong! And finally how, while Minnesota would likely
have a high turnout, it would not be higher than the Ventura race
four years ago; Wrong! Not bad for one paragraph in one release.
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