Voters in six states
cast ballots in a presidential primary today. Many will be asking themselves,
“Which one’s the most electable candidate?” as they consider who will get their
vote.
“Electability” is a
word that’s been tossed around a lot in the last few months. Is a woman
electable? Is a Democratic Socialist electable? Is a mainstream Democrat
electable? Is a 78-year-old electable?
But is there an
actual, fixed definition of “electable”? Political scientist Marjorie Hershey
of Indiana University tackles whether everyone means the same thing when they
use the word.
Naomi Schalit Senior Editor, Politics + SocietyThe Conversation
Electability has been the single most
important force motivating voters in the 2020 Democratic primaries.
But what is it? What makes one candidate seem
like they could get votes from a majority of Americans while another one
couldn’t?
Objectively, political scientists like myself have done a lot of
research on what types of candidates win and lose. We find that moderate
candidates tend to win more often than far-left or
far-right candidates do. Despite the widespread assumption that
women are less electable than men, research shows that women candidates are at least as likely to succeed as men are.
That was true in 2018, and it’s especially likely when an election year is
dominated by scandal, because women are stereotypically viewed as more honest than men.
Women are
stereotypically viewed as more honest than men. Pictured here, an Amy Klobuchar supporter. Getty/Scott Eisen
In legislatures, incumbents probably have a
better chance of getting caught at inappropriate texting than they are of
losing reelection. And we know that when incumbents do lose, it’s because their
challengers surpassed the fundraising threshold that could match the
incumbent’s advantages in media coverage, name recognition, and other factors,
no matter how much the incumbent spent.
But journalists and their audiences don’t
usually pay attention to political science research when they ask about
electability.
Looking at polls, money and mirrors
In their search to identify the most
electable candidate, journalists and their readers look at polls which, early
in a campaign, often say more about a candidate’s name recognition than his or
her public support. They look at fundraising numbers. The biggest fundraiser
doesn’t always win – ask President Bloomberg – but money is one indicator of
public support.
And journalists and readers listen to
themselves. Many people are convinced that regardless of these indicators, the
candidate they like better – or dislike least – will win the election. That was
true of many Hillary Clinton supporters in 2016, who simply couldn’t accept
that Donald Trump could become president.
It is bolstered by “confirmation bias” – the
tendency to seek out and remember bits of information that
confirm your existing opinions. This tendency is nothing new.
In 1964, supporters of conservative
Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater believed that
their man was destined to win, because an invisible – except to them – conservative
majority would emerge on Election Day. Goldwater lost in a landslide.
GOP presidential
candidate Barry Goldwater’s supporters thought he’d win when an invisible army
of conservatives would emerge on Election Day. They didn’t. Mickey Senko/CQ Roll Call via Getty Images
A similar tendency is seen today in many
Sanders enthusiasts. They picture an army of leftists who refuse to vote
currently because they are disgusted with corporate influence over American
life, including overly conservative Democratic candidates. Sanders fans believe that many of these nonvoters will
step up to the polls once they see Sanders’ commitment to genuinely progressive
values.
Wishful thinking
The problem with this kind of thinking about
electability is the evidence – the lack of it.
A large recent survey showed that nonvoters don’t differ
much from voters, other than in their lack of engagement with politics.
“Nonvoters are also far less progressive than
is commonly believed,” wrote Yascha Mounk in The Atlantic. “A clear majority of them
consider themselves either moderate or conservative; only one in five say that
they are liberal.”
Democrats often hope that young people, who lean Democratic, will finally overcome their
habit of nonvoting. But even in the high-turnout midterm elections of 2018, people under 30
voted at much lower rates than people over 65. In the recent Texas Democratic
primary, Sanders won most Latino American voters under 30, but older Latino
Americans, who favored Biden, turned out in larger numbers.
Primary vs. general election
Who, then, is an electable candidate?
First, it’s a candidate whose advisers
understand the rules of the election they’re competing in now.
For example: The Democratic Party has outlawed winner-take-all nominating events. Any candidate who
wins at least 15% of the vote in a primary or caucus gets about the same
percentage of delegates from that state as he or she did in the popular vote.
That means a candidate who is ahead in the
delegate count midway through the nominating season will be hard to beat later.
An opponent can’t catch up as easily by getting a huge infusion of delegates
from a late state contest, because the front-runner will pick up a share of
that state’s delegates as well; there is no 3-point shot in Democratic
nomination politics.
But electability in Democratic primaries is
not the same as electability in November. That will require beating Donald
Trump, not Amy Klobuchar or Pete Buttigieg.
The Democrat who is most electable in the
Indiana Democratic primary will not be the winner of Indiana’s electoral votes in November,
because the Indiana electorate in November will be dominated by Republicans.
Beating Trump will require very high turnout among Democrats, depressed turnout among
Republicans, and enthusiasm among the fairly small group of swing voters who
have managed to avoid the polarization of current American politics.
Voter turnout is most common among the people who habitually vote: the two parties’ existing voter
bases. So an electable candidate is one who excites that party’s existing voter
base but doesn’t rile up the opposing party’s base to an unusual degree.
For most primary voters, however, the most
electable candidate is whichever candidate that voter favors.
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