The media this cycle (no surprise) has been wildly inaccurate in its coverage of the election challenges facing Democrats this November. Time and again we've seen them repeat talking points and "common wisdom" that the Republican 72-hour GOTV operation can do wonders and that Howard Dean is unwisely spending money on his 50-state strategy. They're also constantly repeating the mantra that partisan gerrymandering is the source of uncompetitive elections and GOP advantage. Experts say that the data does not hold these truths to be self-evident. Let's dissect a bit.
The Real November Election Showdown: Howard Dean's 50-State Strategy vs. Rahm Emmanuel's Traditional Approach
Dean vs. Emmanuel: When former Vermont governor Howard Dean took the helm of the Democratic National Committee, he made a strategic decision to pump resources into all 50 states, in an attempt to build the Democratic Party in places where it hasn't been competitive in presidential races and most federal races for years. His so-called "50-state strategy" has been the source of much controversy, leading to Dean's public battles with Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chair Rahm Emanuel, who favors focused spending on targeted races. Many think the results of tonights election results will indicate which party leader had the right approach. Not so fast...
There are two ways to try to measure the answer: what happens in 2006 and what happens in 2016. The true measurement of Dean's decision will not be measurable for at least a decade, and that only if the Democrats continue to invest in his strategy for several election cycles. The Democratic Party's electoral problems in congressional races in recent years are grounded in a political geography that they must transform if they are to ever have a relatively secure majority. In today's electoral politics, when the national partisan division is evenly divided, Republicans win more than 50% support in 30 out of 50 states, which translates into Republicans winning 60 of 100 U.S. Senate seats if every voter voted for the same party in races for president and Senate. Republicans also would win a majority of the vote in 41 more of today's House seats than Democrats in such an election. If Democrats cannot either break out of a 50-50 political reality or reshape where they win support, their majorities will always be dependent on their candidates winning in Republican-leaning areas. Here are two ways of looking at tonight's results:
"Dean is a Fool": The way you build long-term is to succeed short-term
Lessons from a shrinking number of competitive states in presidential races: In 1976, 24 states were presidential battlegrounds, representing 345 electoral votes and most of the nation. By 2004, that number had more than half, to a mere 13 states representing 159 electoral votes. What's more, in 2004, 48 of 51 presidential contests went to the same party as in 2000 - underscoring how difficult it is to overcome rigid state partisanship in presidential elections even when your side has more than half a billion dollars to spend. So why sink resources in 50 states, rather than just 13?
With U.S. House districts tilted against Democrats, you must win when you can and hold on: The rigid partisanship of states in presidential races is mirrored almost across the board in U.S. House races, and Republicans currently have an advantage of 41 more seats in an evenly divided year - with the median district being one that a Republican in an open seat would be favored to win by 4.5%. On top of that structural barrier, Republicans start off with the advantage of incumbency, which gives incumbents on average a likely boost of between 6% and 9%. In each of the four national elections since 1996, more than 98% of incumbents have won, and more than 90% of all races were won in comfortable wins of more than 10%. Of the 23 seats that were won by 10% or less, they are concentrated in 17 states. Of those 17 states, only 10 represent pick-up opportunities for the Democrats (CO, CT, IN, LA, MN, NC, NM, NY, PA, and WA). So why sink resources in 50 states, rather than the 10 where history indicates actual pick-up opportunities?
"Dean is a Genius": Lift the Party Up, State by State
It would take an unprecedented national shift for Democrats to win many House seats. Guess what? Its happening: The tilted state partisanship of most of America's congressional districts means that no matter how you draw the lines, a majority of voters in each district will prefer one party to the other. In a nationally even year between the parties in congressional elections, therefore, Republicans typically will win an open seat race in a district that has a 55%-45% tilt with, surprise, 55% of the vote. And if the national climate shifts to a 54% year for the Democrats - the Republicans will still likely carry that district, albeit now by only 51% to 49%. Faced with the fact that most districts tilt toward Republicans and Republicans start out with more incumbents, Democrats need to do enormously well nationally to shift even just the 15 seats necessary to win a majority of the House. But this might just be the year that Democrats win the 57% or 58% of the national congressional vote that they need to take back the House with room to spare. The 50-state strategy was luckily timed to take advantage of this once-in-a-generation opportunity and create opportunities in races that few dreamed would be competitive this time last year - which is why Republicans are pouring out resources now to defend House districts in Republican strongholds like Kansas and Nebraska.
In elections witnessing unprecedented national shifts, parties pick up large numbers of seats down-ticket: In a national tidal wave by one party in an election cycle, even though a marginal number of U.S. House seats might change hands, the dominant party can pick up an enormous amount of state legislative seats down-ticket. For example, the Republican wave in 1994 led to an increase of 514 more Republican state legislative seats. This year, there are 6,119 state legislative contests in 46 states and control of twenty state legislative chambers is decided by five or less seats. What indicates that Dean's 50-state strategy might be useful here is that of these ten potential chamber pick-ups, five of them are in states that Bush won in 2004: Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky, Montana, Nevada, and Tennessee. If these Democrats can stay in office, they can help shape these states' future political agendas and practical policy matters like redrawing district lines in the next scheduled redistricting in 2011.
Ticket-splitting means rock-solid presidential red-states don't equal rock-solid red-voting in all statewide races: Just as in state legislative races, it seems likely that a Democratic tidal-wave would lift the chances of their candidates for governor and other statewide offices across the country. The Democrats are in range to pick-up eight Governors' mansions, and four of them are in states that Bush carried in 2004: Arkansas, Colorado, Ohio and Nevada. One by-product of winning high-profile states races is that it establishes these Democrats as candidates who later have a better chance of winning federal elections in Republican-leaning areas.
Urban Political Legend: Karl Rove & the GOP's Famed 72-Hour GOTV Operation
Myth: Democrats should be shaking in their boots today about the GOP's famed "72-hour" get-out-the-vote operation -- at least if you've been watching television news or reading the papers in the last month:
"But the "72-hour" get-out-the-vote (GOTV) program developed by Karl Rove ... gave Republicans a strategic and technological edge that helped them hold onto the House and Senate in the past two elections." - Christian Science Monitor
"Republicans are also deploying their "72-hour plan'' for turning out supporters, which party leaders have credited as a central element in their victories in 2002 and 2004." - Bloomberg News
"Mehlman says the GOP's much-vaunted "72-hour" plan is surpassing even the grass-roots support he witnessed in 2004." - U.S. News & World Report
"[Republicans] are gearing up for the latest iteration of the 72-Hour Plan....National Democratic officials, who lag behind in voter outreach despite their aggressive catchup efforts, concede that they would be in trouble if they stood alone in the field against this legendary Republican juggernaut." - New York Times
But has anyone actually demonstrated that the Republicans indeed did have a better turnout operation than the Democrats? Is the proof simply that Republicans won the last two federal election cycles?
Truth: FairVote's analysis of the 2004 presidential elections indicates that Democrats did relatively better in battlegrounds than in the rest of the country suggests that the Democrats' campaign efforts centered on swing states were in fact more effective than those of the Republicans.
Both parties were most focused on the 13 states that were closest in their two-party partisanship - the ones they knew would tip a 50-50 election. In these battlegrounds, Democrats improved their 2000 performance by a per-state average of 1.33% percent, making gains in 11 of 13 states. While George Bush would have won 10 of these 13 hotly contested states in 2000 had the election been tied in the national popular vote, in 2004 he would have won only five of these states if the election had been even nationally.
It was George Bush's national advantage in voter preference that carried him to victory, a fact that is underscored by exit polls suggesting that his key win in Ohio was far more based on converting voters who had supported Al Gore in 2000 than winning new voters.
John Kerry's campaign's relative success in battlegrounds thus helps explain why there were so few shifts in the Electoral College map despite Bush going from losing by a half million votes nationally to winning the national vote by three and a half million votes.
The lesson? Don't believe everything you read in the papers.
[More myths uncovered at FairVote]