Approaching the cliff
12/04/2012
Voters often approach policy issues from a very different angle than do Washington elites. So it is with the fiscal cliff. Everyone thinks the debt and deficit are serious. Everyone…
Obama’s win shouldn’t be surprising
11/13/2012
It’s both the most often repeated and ridiculously misleading statistic of campaign 2012: that no president since FDR has ever been reelected with unemployment over 7.2 percent. True, but no…
Returning to the fundamentals
10/30/2012
With Election Day fast approaching, let’s toss the confusing welter of polls for a moment and return to the fundamentals I have been emphasizing here for years. First is the…
Where we are in the race
10/23/2012
Perhaps it’s the seemingly unsettled nature of the race, or perhaps it’s just our blogging culture, but instead of following a single theme through 600 words, allow me to offer…
Romney’s rise
10/17/2012
Some national poll-to-poll comparisons reveal the fading impact of Romney’s debate victory. Shortly after the debate, Ipsos put Obama 3 points behind Romney; today he’s 2 points ahead. IBD/TIPP’s poll gave Romney a 2-point lead just after the debate, but he is tied with the president today. Rand’s tracker had Obama’s lead down to 2 points on the 10th, but is back at 5 points today.
These are small shifts at best, but they do suggest Romney’s rise has been arrested, and perhaps even reversed.
Second, will the debate change the outcome? It’s one thing to see a debate narrow margins, something else to say it determined the outcome. Again, this question is more complicated than it seems. Consider the simplest version: At any point after the debate, did it appear probable that Romney would win the general election? No. At no time did Pollster’s model give Romney the lead in the popular vote. Even when they assigned the president 7 fewer electoral votes than he needed for victory, he also had an 83 percent chance of winning Ohio and a 63 percent chance of winning Colorado, either of which would have put him over the top. Romney was then likely to win just 206 electoral votes.
Was it really the debate? There is some evidence more was at work here. Turn again to the Pollster model, which suggests Romney’s upswing began around Sept. 23, well before the debate.
The Rand survey offers up another intriguing tidbit. By re-interviewing the same voters repeatedly, this poll examines the extent to which voters are shifting their allegiances. The number switching to Obama was greater than the number moving to Romney every day during the last weeks in September. However, beginning a couple of days before the debate, those switching to Romney began to outnumber those moving to Obama. Similarly, their horserace data found a sustained upward trend for Romney beginning Sept. 27, peaking on Oct. 10.
If it wasn’t just the debate, what else was it? Here it gets interesting, harkening back to analysis based on fundamentals that I have been preaching for years. In short, somehow or other, the horserace always gets aligned with the fundamentals at some point in the cycle. We attribute it to a debate or a gaffe or an ad, but it’s actually just fundamental reality asserting itself. Ten statistical models developed by political scientists that consider only economic and political fundamentals (not trial heat polls) predict an average two-party vote that is tied at exactly 50 percent for each. This was destined to be a close race. Somehow, sometime, the horserace polls were going to fall in line with the fundamentals.
With the HuffPost model showing a nine-tenths-of-a-point advantage for the president, it could hardly be closer to 50/50, but with 281 electoral votes now likely in the president’s column, he remains the favorite.
Mellman is president of The Mellman Group and has worked for Democratic candidates and causes since 1982. Current clients include the majority leader of the Senate and the Democratic whip in the House.
Where do undecideds go?
10/09/2012
My distinguished sparring partner in these pages (and real-life friend) Dr. David Hill is, alas, behind the times, or perhaps letting his hopes outrun the data. Last week, he argued…
Debates do matter – sometimes
10/02/2012
Our yen for “yes” or “no” answers sometimes clouds our understanding – in this case, of presidential debates. Observers seem wedded to saying either “Yes, debates do have an impact”…
Whither the independents
09/18/2012
Every national poll in the last week (save the reliably Republican Rasmussen) has shown the president leading within a fairly narrow band – 1 to 6 points – averaging to…
Romney’s uphill road
09/11/2012
After a long, lovely hiatus, marred only by too little real vacation, it’s an opportune moment to examine just where the race for president stands as we enter the contest’s…
Let Americans vote
07/31/2012
Our democracy is under attack from within. Republicans (and it seems to be just Republicans) appear determined to deny citizens their constitutional right to vote. Oddly enough, those whose rights…