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Where's Our Advice?


Andrew Gelman conjectures offhand that "For most of the TPM audience, I suspect that the main appeal of Red State, Blue State is the potential to better understand why some people vote Republican, and what positions the Democrats should take, or need to take, in order to win elections" whereas his readers at New Majority are looking for help in the reverse quest. I, personally, picked up <em>Red State, Blue State</em> months and months ago mostly hoping to achieve a smug sense of superiority vis-a-vis other pundits.

But I think he's basically right. Mostly people care about understanding voter behavior because they want to understand how to influence election outcomes. But unless I'm reading the book wrongly, his disappointing thesis is that you basically can't. That kind of nihilistic point of view is pretty common among political scientists, but it's disappointing to political activists who like to think that sharper arguments or exciting new facts are likely to swing things. But that's the way it is. Or do I have this wrong? Is there electoral advice for, say, the now-out-of-power Republicans lurking somewhere in this book?

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Who cares?

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It's a whole lot easier to understand what moved voters and motivated them in the past than it is to fashion a message that will move them in the present. Things change. Conditions change. Perspectives change as a result of circumstances. It's much harder to effect a quick change within the parameters of a campaign season. The far more effective way to go about it is long term, to reset the way people think about and perceive public issues, the role of government and so on. That's why the Republicans had such a long and strong run. For a very long time they played long term and it worked very well. They lost control when they won power because all their long term messages and the attitudes they had fostered during their years out of power were false. It took a while for people to figure out the Republicans are just wrong on almost everything, but it worked out.

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Matthew Yglesias

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