The Nature of Change
In retrospect, it seems clear that neither the biting conservative critique of government overreach and ineptitude, nor the New Democratic embrace of those ideas, did nearly as much to undermine public confidence in government as the manifest incompetence of the Bush administration. Americans no longer trust their government because for eight years the government has not deserved their trust. There's ample data to bolster that contention. In May, Pew found that just 37% trust the federal government, and that those opinions closely track the presidential approval rating. Americans' faith in institutions of all kinds, in fact, has declined sharply over the past decade, with faith in governmental institutions leading the way, and approaching or surpassing Nixonian lows.
If that snowballing crisis of confidence is the greatest obstacle facing Barack Obama as he enters office, it also represents his greatest opportunity. Between August and October, the percentage of Americans who believed that the government has the power to fix the economy plummeted from 68 to 56. On the other hand, since his election, roughly two-thirds of Americans have reported that they are confident in Obama's ability to be a good president. His favorability spiked upwards immediately after his election, and has remained high.
So Americans trust Obama, but not the government that he was elected to lead. They are distrustful of partisanship, skeptical of bureaucracy, and suspicious of expertise. They agree that the country has rarely faced a more dire crisis, and that government seems unable to resolve it.
Obama Fumbles
I think any sensible person would say that if you've got a bunch of teams who play throughout the season, and many of them have one loss or two losses--there's no clear decisive winner--that we should be creating a playoff system. I don't know any serious fan of college football who has disagreed with me on this. So, I'm gonna throw my weight around a little bit. I think it's the right thing to do.
-Barack Obama, November 17, 2008
The Other Guantanamo
Orszag and Zawahiri and Bair, Oh My! (Wednesday Roundup)
Warning Shots
Of Clinton and Clintonites
But I suspect that's not enough. She's sipped from the cup of executive power, and won't settle for legislative dregs. She'd rather rank first in the cabinet, fourth-in-line for the Presidency, than return to a body in which she ranks 62nd. She knows that such an appointment won't last forever, but then, neither does the Presidency. Hillary has always wanted to be in charge, to be a power in her own right. If this is as close as she can come, it's what she'll take.
Potpourri
- The Case for Lieberman: Yes, Lieberman richly deserves to be stripped of his chairmanship. And yes, revenge is sweet. So why is Barack Obama sending signals that he is, at most, agnostic on Lieberman's future? It may be a purely tactical ploy, designed to enhance Obama's image as a forgiving, conciliatory figure, while leaving the unpleasant task of ousting Lieberman to the caucus. But as the fight drags on, there are increasingly clear signals that Obama actually wants to see Lieberman retain his chair. I can think of three reasons why that might actually make sense for the new administration. First, it's worth remembering that one of the principal complaints against Lieberman's tenure - excessive passivity and ineffectual oversight - may look like a virtue to the incoming administration. On a similar note, if Obama is responsible for Lieberman keeping his chair, it's a debt he can cash in at will. Every president dreams of having a powerful chairman under his thumb; if Lieberman acts up, Obama can count on anger in the caucus to force his ouster. Finally, there's the question of Joe's presumptive replacement, Daniel Akaka. When TIME numbered him among the five worst senators, it called him "living proof that experience does not necessarily yield expertise," and labeled him the "master of the minor resolution and the bill that dies in committee." The new administration may prefer Lieberman, for all his faults, because he actually possesses the legislative skills to shepherd bills through to passage. We've grown used to thinking of Obama as a candidate, free to take principled stands without bearing their consequences. We'd do well to start thinking him as an executive, shrewdly calculating the trade-offs that will be necessary to advance his agenda.
- Battle of the Bald: The most interesting succession fight this week is actually taking place in the legislative branch, where Henry Waxman of California is challenging John Dingell of Michigan for the gavel at House Energy and Commerce. The pair are not entirely dissimilar; both are prolific legislators and dogged investigators, and tend toward the liberal end of the caucus on most issues. There are a number of ways to frame the conflict. Some see it as a bellwether for the direction of the caucus as a whole, with Dingell standing in for the moderates, and Waxman championing those who want to use the new majority to pass an unabashedly liberal agenda. Others see simple frustration on the part of Waxman, who despite serving for 34 years remains stuck in the second slot behind Dingell, an 81-year-old whom he hoped would retire, but instead seems poised to break the congressional longevity record at 54 years. But whatever its other dynamics, the big battle here is over the future of the American automobile industry. Dingell has been Detroit's staunchest advocate, fending off decades of efforts to tighten efficiency standards and impose regulation. Waxman, the leading congressional advocate of cap-and-trade, lays Detroit's present struggles at Dingell's feet, arguing that his protectionism encouraged the industry continue down the dead-end path of building gas-guzzling behemoths. If you're looking for a new cause now that the election is over, give your member a call, and let her know which side you think she should take.
- All The News They Wish Would Be Printed: Kudos to the Yes Men, for pulling off the cleverest prank of the cycle by publishing and distributing a fantasy edition of The New York Times, complete with its own website. The jokes are a little heavy-handed, and some of the policies a little too far left for my taste, but I have to applaud the shear audacity and imagination of the prank. Who knows? Perhaps some stories will prove prophetic.
- City Slickers: The wonk in me loves the fact that Obama is making good on his promise to create an Office of Urban Policy. Sure, it's partly about rewarding and caring for his electoral base. But it also stands to rectify a long-running disparity in the way that government resources are allocated and coordinated. At its inception in 1965, HUD (that's Housing and Urban Development) was intended to fill this role. But that was during the heyday of urban renewal, and the agency has since abandoned the second half of its mission to focus on housing. Putting in place a new coordinator, with an office in the West Wing or EEOB, will be a major statement. More than that, it signals the rebirth of a real partnership between federal and municipal officials. And who will be the first White House Director of Urban Policy? Let the baseless speculation begin.
- Changement? Änderung? Cambiamento? There's a fascinating discussion, in today's Times, of European reaction to Obama's election:
In the general European euphoria over the election of Barack Obama, there is the beginning of self-reflection about Europe's own troubles with racial integration. Many are asking if there could be a French, British, German or Italian Obama, and everyone knows the answer is no, not anytime soon.
The most interesting part of the debate, to my mind, is the divide over how minorities can best achieve equality. In France, the debate is particularly fierce. The conservative French establishment finds in Obama's triumph evidence that integration and embrace of a national (and not particular) identity can be a path to success for immigrants and their offspring. As Le Figaro put it: "Obama should be the model to follow for young immigrants who have come to doubt their feeling of belonging to the nation. Minorities, who have chosen their exile, in contrast to black Americans, still have a lot to prove." The left vehemently disagrees on where to place the blame, faulting instead the establishments reification of difference, which "locked [non-whites] inside identities of resentment." But both sides agree that difference is debilitating. There were reams devoted to this question after the riots in 2005. One intriguingly contrary story pointed out how calm Marseille remained amidst the violence, crediting Marseille Espérance, an assembly of leaders of the city's various ethnic blocs, with maintaining order. So what's the better path toward ending discrimination - ignoring differences and urging assimilation, or reifying them and maintaining an uneasy truce through dialogue and compromise? Perhaps Obama's ascension suggests a more complicated narrative. He himself credits the assertive Civil Rights movement with securing opportunity, but then eschewed its rhetoric in his own run for office. That suggests minorities must first be politically empowered, and only then, from a position of strength and security, will they feel comfortable taking their place as equal citizens. It's the classic American model - forging a national identity that uses group identities as its constituent elements - as opposed to the French model - which urges the rejection of the particular in favor of the universal. We've been having this debate with the French for centuries, and until recently, they looked to be on the winning side. It will be fascinating to see what Obama's triumph means for Europe.
In Defense of Gates at Defense
(Self)-Parody
Of Mandates
In Transition
- Eighteen months after Bill Clinton was sworn in as president, he appointed Leon Panetta as his new chief of staff. Panetta asked his predecessor if he had an organizational chart of the White House; McLarty reportedly replied, "I don't think I do." That's pretty much all you need to know about the Clinton transition. Among President Clinton's greatest strengths were his restless curiosity and creativity. But it took him a year and a half to figure out that he needed a chief of staff who could compensate for his weaknesses, not just supplement his strengths. And that's all I have to say about the selection of Rahm Emanuel.
- Obama has one structural advantage over the 1992 transition: a deep bench. He's drawing on veterans of an administration many Americans now remember with some nostalgia. The Clintonites, in contrast, weren't about to fill out their ranks with Carter aides. It also helps that Obama comes from Chicago, and not from Little Rock. All Presidents spend years assembling around themselves an entourage of hangers-on and retainers; these tend to be the people who do them both the most harm and the most good once they actually ascend to office. Obama has been fishing in a much larger pool for his talent, and it shows. Finally, the two four years that Obama spent in Washington may have been fewer than his rivals on the campaign trail, but they're the most for an incoming Democrat since Lyndon Johnson, and they'll help.
- There's been a surprising amount of hand-wringing over Obama's prospective choices for his financial team. I think it's misplaced. Obama finds himself in a peculiar bind - the economy of the world teeters on the edge of disaster, the markets scrutinize his every pronouncement and appointment for signs of his policies, and yet he won't be able to take any substantive action for another two months. His immediate imperative is to reassure the markets and ease the crisis of confidence. Only naming a trusted and experienced figure can accomplish that goal; Summers and Geithner both qualify. Further out, he'll have an easier time selling substantive changes if his emissary is trusted by his opponents. Who better to make the case for stimulus than a reformed deficit hawk? To push for more extensive regulation than an accomplished liberalizer?
- My favorite element of the transition website isn't its hokey address. And it's not the (oddly familiar) invitation to tell your story of this American Moment. (I suspect the prize will be a shout-out in the inaugural address.) No, it's the half-built section entitled America Serves, which promises to connect Americans with opportunities to aid their nation. The notion of national service - of mutual responsibility and collective sacrifice - was a crucial element of Obama's campaign trail rhetoric. We've seen similar initiatives for two decades, and know that they have seldom lived up to their billing. So the inclusion of America Serves on the transition page is doubly encouraging. It signals the centrality of the notion and the strength of Obama's commitment to the program. And, perhaps more importantly, it provides our first solid indication that the Obama Administration will utilize some of the same grassroots tools as the campaign to organize Americans to improve our nation.
The Orphans of Defeat (and other reflections)
Just Peachy
Five Thoughts for Sunday
5) Where Are the Overnights? When McCain pollster Bill McInturff released his now-infamous memo he made it clear that his spirits had been buoyed by a remarkable night of polling on Monday. In fact, the version sent around the campaign he wrote, "Pls pray for another night of tracking like the one I had last night!!!"
Well, since that release, he's traded broadsides with Stan Greenberg as to its accuracy. And I took him to task, as well. But here's the thing - all of that has focused on numbers that were produced on Monday night. And, as McInturff himself notes, those numbers were a sharp departure from what he'd been seeing. In polling, we have a technical term for this - outliers. If McInturff had been able to replicate those results on subsequent nights, much less improve upon them, I expect we would have seen still-more memos, or evidence of it in his responses. But we haven't. So we can safely dismiss McInturff's original numbers as aberrational.
4) And Speaking of Outliers... The much hyped Zogby tracking poll, which showed a 1-point McCain lead in its overnight sample on Saturday, reported a 10-point Obama lead in its Sunday overnight sample. This is why most pollsters won't break out results on a nightly basis - 400 voters, with no multiple-night callbacks, simply isn't large enough sample.
Zogby's explanation sure is entertaining, though:
So what happened to give McCain a one-point lead in the one-day polling on Friday? It was a day of consolidation for him, too. He had been losing support among key groups and began to regain some of his own base. He now leads by 21 points among NASCAR fans, 9 among investors, 6 among voters in armed forces households, and 2 among voters over 65 years old.
Instead of blaming random variation, Zogby doubles down, confidently asserting that McCain had been "losing" support, then had a magical day of "consolidation," before presumably hemorrhaging support again. And he proves it by citing numbers from a motley collection of presumptively friendly subgroups. If it takes guts to report results based on a sample size of 400, breaking out armed forces households takes some serious cojones. With fewer than 3 million adults residing in households with a member of the active-duty military, guard, or reserves, these voters can't comprise more than 3% of Zogby's total sample. So when he says McCain maintains a six-point lead, he means something like 33 voters to 31. But Zogby's not done:
Remember, as I said yesterday, one day does not make a trend. This is a three-day rolling average and no changes have been tectonic. A special note to blogger friends: calm it down. Lay off the cable television noise and look at your baseball cards in your spare time. It is better for your (and everyone else's) health.
The continued presumption that the poll is reflecting actual changes on a daily basis, but that these changes may not represent a "tectonic shift" unless maintained for several days, is breathtaking. But what I really love is the swipe at his most trenchant critic, Nate Silver. When he's not blogging on polling at FiveThirtyEight.com, Nate's day job remains as a co-author of Baseball Prospectus. I'm sure that if Nate wrote a little less about polling, it would be better for Zogby's health, but he's doing the rest of us a world of good.
3) Black Voters: Perhaps the most important demographic group in this election is also the most reliably Democratic - Black voters. In the early voting, they turned out at rates that defied predictions - 35% of voters in Georgia, 36% in Louisiana, and 26% in North Carolina. Each of those numbers far exceeds their percentage of registered voters, not to mention eclipsing all past turnout records. As a demographic group, they're voting fairly monolithically for Obama, and have put a number of reliably red states in play.
Polling, as a science, tests its models retrospectively. When voters act in unprecedented fashion, the models struggle to keep up. Pew, for example, loosened its voter screen just for black voters - it projects them at !2% of the electorate, up from 9% four years ago. (That's one reason why Pew has consistently shown some of the largest leads for Obama.) I'm sympathetic to the impulse, but applying different screens to different populations amounts to guesswork.
The problem for pollsters is that black voters haven't been reporting attitudes that are hugely different from past elections, but they have been exhibiting radically different behavior. Since polls use the former to predict the latter, they're running into all kinds of trouble. Gallup's latest release confirms this, reporting that Black voters are more likely to have been contacted by the Obama campaign, and to express a higher likelihood of voting - but on gauges like registration and interest, Black voters and White voters report virtually identical increases. That's despite the very good objective data on black registration this cycle, from the various and several states, which shows that black registration has actually increased far out of proportion to their share of the population.
The Gallup release also contains this priceless line:
In Gallup's most recent update on likely voters, blacks constitute 11% of both the expanded and traditional likely voter group, higher than the 8% representation in Gallup's final estimate of voters from 2004. If these trends continue through the election next Tuesday, black turnout rates this year may approach or match turnout rates among whites.
That's Gallup's own special way of confessing that, until recently, its likely voter models had been screening out many of these black voters. Now that they tell Gallup they've already voted, though, they score high enough on Gallup's models to make the cut, and their percentage of the total is rising. But here's the key point. In 2004, when Gallup's final numbers put them at 8%, black voters actually accounted for somewhere between 9% and 11% of the total. And this year, with Gallup pegging them at 11%, the write-up is projecting an increase. If they match raw turnout rates among white voters, as the release suggests, they'll account for at least 12% of the total, in line with Pew's figures. Every point that black turnout increases produces (roughly) a 0.9% swing toward Obama. So if polls assume that turnout is at 11%, and it surges to a perfectly plausible 13%, that's a 1.8% shift. And it's amplified by the concentration of black voters in states like Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia that are suddenly in the balance, where a proportionate increase would seal an Obama win.
2) The Keystone State: The fashionable thing to do, among angst-ridden Democrats, is to fret about Pennsylvania. Nate Silver has already done his level-best to talk these folks down off the ledge. And just as he finishes, SurveyUSA releases a new poll that has Obama up just seven points, 51-44%. Since its last poll had Obama ahead 53-41%, that's a big deal. But before you leap, you should note that this latest poll has Obama up 80-16% among black voters, down from 89-10%. So that's almost a two-point swing right there - and unless you believe black voters are abandoning Obama, you can safely discount it. McCain now does better among whites and non-college graduates. But even as he's gained ground among Republicans, and actually lost a little among Independents. And that, I think, is the key to understanding the 'tightening' in Pennsylvania. As McCain ramps up the coded appeals and the fear-mongering, he's bringing home some of his core supporters, who had wavered toward Obama or considered not voting. So his numbers are rising. But he's progressively less likely to win over moderates or independents, and is shoring up Obama's support among his own core voters, so Obama's support isn't actually shrinking. Pollster's neat graph nicely illustrates this dynamic.
Here's the essential point: There's a reason McCain waited until the final days to unleash his nastiest, most divisive message. It's a desperate ploy. He always knew that these attacks would shore up his support and increase his numbers in the polling. But his campaign also understood that to be a Pyrrhic victory - his core support isn't enough to win the state, and these attacks sink his final hope of winning over the moderate swing voters. So the undecideds - mostly conservatives and Republicans who didn't like either candidate - are coming back to McCain. But in the process, he's alienating enough voters to seal Obama's victory. In short, Obama is now less likely to win Pennsylvania by double digits, but perhaps more certain than ever of carrying the state. Ironic, no?
1) Forty-Eight Hours: The polls open in forty-eight hours, and the only question left is the margin of Obama's win. How many electoral votes will he carry? Which red states will turn blue this year? How many senators and representatives will travel to Washington on his coattails?
Is that hubris? Presumption? Am I tempting the fates? No, not really. Perhaps a third of the votes have already been cast, and we have a fairly good idea how they break down. We've got reams and reams of polling data - this isn't 1948 - and the polls have continued right down to the wire. We don't know all of the details, but we can be certain of the headline.
There are reasons good and bad why most observers refrain from calling elections in advance. The risk of humiliation. The danger of discouraging voters from turning out, so corrosive to our democracy. The tightness of most national races, rendering them too close to call. Superstition. The thrill of suspense, and the ratings and readers it garners.
But for better or worse, I'm calling this race. Nothing in life is certain; it's too high a standard to apply. But I can say, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Barack Obama will win the election on Tuesday. And that's good enough for me.
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