Wednesday, November 03, 2010
Starting To Dig Into The Results
You already know what happened. Some first thoughts as we start to dig in.
Here's the list of House and Senate seats that changed hands, including defeated incumbents. What's striking is how broad the geography of these losses were for the Democrats. Republicans gained seats in 33 states across the country. This was not an election that was regionalized although some stretches of land were a killing field for the Democrats--namely Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin. Essentially if I were to drive from my house to visit my parents, I'd traverse the land that gave the Republicans their majority. I-70 stretches across this part of the country. This sets up the battleground for Obama's re-election. Expect him to spend a lot of time here over the next 2 years. Not surprisingly, the Rust Belt has hemorrhaged jobs over the last decade with many parts having higher than the national average in unemployment.
The second source of Democratic losses, including some from the above states, was among the Blue Dog Coalition which essentially saw its ranks cut in half. These conservative, often rural and southern, Democrats were no match for yesterday's wave. Despite the fact that many voted against health care reform, cap and trade, and other parts of the Democratic agenda, they lost in droves. The result of this is the creation of a smaller, yet more liberal, Democratic caucus. Progressives have always criticized Blue Dogs as being Democrat-lite and impediments to more liberal policy. Nonetheless, without them you don't have a majority.
Seniority wasn't insulation to defeat. Normally the most difficult campaign that a member of Congress will have will be his earliest ones. In the first few terms members are still learning the job, learning their district, and are thus susceptible to being knocked off. They haven't built up a record and reputation to deter serious challengers. Yesterday's losses were across the seniority spectrum. 26 of the incumbents knocked off were in either their first or second term--products of the 2006 and 2008 Democratic waves. At the same time, 3 committee chairmen (Oberstar, Spratt, and Skelton) were also knocked off as were 14 term Rich Boucher (VA), 13 term Paul Kanjorski (PA), and 10 term Gene Taylor (MS) and Chet Edwards (TX).
Aside from these numbers and trends, another subject that has been discussed in the commentary today relates to the upcoming re-districting process. With the census concluded, state legislatures will undertake the process of redrawing House district lines to correspond with population growth and shifts. Results in governor's and statehouse races will obviously affect how this process proceeds on a state by state basis. Something that I haven't heard discussed however, is how redistricting will have an immediate effect on the members elected for the first time last night.
All of the incoming freshmen members (with the exception of those from one district states) were elected from a constituency that is going to change over the next year. Rather than have time to learn the contours of their district and develop the representative skills to maintain their seat, they have to assume that the people who just elected them are not necessarily going to be there to vote for them in 2012--many of them will be pushed into neighboring districts while others from surrounding areas are added. This has to be unsettling to these members, especially those elected by small margins. Furthermore, a number of states where Republicans made gains--Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York--are slated to lose seats in the reapportionment process. Depending on how these states redistrict, GOP gains could be wiped out not by the 2012 elections but by the hand of mapmakers. This is a dynamic that I would pay a lot of attention to over the next year or so.
That's it for now. More to come.
Tuesday, November 02, 2010
Midterm Live Blogging
8:23: So far, things not looking good for Democrats in Virginia. Pereillo going down, which was expected. The bigger story is Rich Boucher down in coal country. Boucher had always been able to not only hold this corner of the state, but do so quite handily. Apparently that's over, which is a shame as I always found him to be a pretty serious, policy oriented member. Gerry Connolly also in trouble in northern VA. Along with Nye down in Hampton Roads area, Dems could lose 4.
8:34: Connecticut Senate called for Blumenthal. Republican hopes for the Senate take a hit. Not unexpected but R's are going to need to run the table.
8:37: Manchin win called in WV. That should pretty much end the R's Senate dream. Only question seems to be whether Reid will be around to lead or if Schumer/Durbin battle looms.
8:45: Wisconsin getting ready to close in 15 minutes. Polling shows bad night for Dems on the horizon. Keep an eye out for 7th. Obey open seat the most competitive. Feingold not in good shape for Senate seat.
8:49: Boyd down big in FL-2. Blue dogs are having their ranks decimated. New Congress is going to be much more partisan as the remaining moderates are purged.
8:52: Giannoulias looking good in IL w/12% in. As with all IL races it will be the magnitude of Chicago turnout that determines the outcome here. Does the machine still live???
8:55: Marcy Kaptur has a good night in what could be an ugly night for OH Dems. Electoral Politics Rule 1: Don't dress like a Nazi.
9:05: Networks calling it for a Republican House majority.
9:20: Indiana's "The Bloody 9th" flips again. Baron Hill out. One of the most competitive districts in the country cycle after cycle.
9:29: New Hampshire goes back to its Republican roots? Both House seats flip plus R's hold Senate. Yet...Dems hold Governorship.
9:31: Just in case anyone was unclear about First Amendment, Oklahoma has voted to ban Sharia law. Good God.
9:36: Dems. Kanjorski and Carney in big trouble in NE Pennsylvania.
9:41: Rahall holds on in WV. Wonder how much Manchin momentum helped him. Very ugly race as Lebanese American Rahall tarred with "Arab" tag. Glad this kind of crap wasn't rewarded, at least here.
9:44: Lincoln Davis seems done in TN. Another Blue Dog. How many rural southern Dems left??? Chet Edwards also out in TX.
For Dems out there, might I recommend Clynelish 14 y.o. Single Malt Scotch? Quite nice as I'm enjoying it now.
10:03: For the first time since Reconstruction, Republicans hold the North Carolina legislature. Gotta get my Eric Foner out to get the history.
10:11: Dems. Marshall and Bishop going down in Georgia. The south is becoming essentially Republican unless you've got a sizable black population in your district. Shuler hangs on in NC but he's very much the exception.
10:25: Wisconsin in for big changes. Looks like two House seats flip (7 and 8). Scott Walker elected Governor. Obama got 56% in WI, one of his most impressive performances for a swing state. WI unemployment not as bad as other Rust Belt states.
10:32: If anyone would have told you, 2 years ago, that West Virginia would be a bright spot for Democrats in the future, you'd have thought they were certifiable. 2010 is the bizarro 2008.
10:42: Russ Feingold defeated in Wisconsin. Never won by a lot but was reliable. Can't wait to see turnout data. Low turnout in Dane and Milwaukee??? The Progressive tradition in WI really took a hit tonight. With Feingold loss and Obey retirement, few remnants left.
10:48: South Texas has 4 Latino Dem. House members. After tonight only 2 may be left. Ortiz out, Rodriguez trailing badly.
10:54: Only about 10-15% in for most races, but things looking really weird in upstate NY. GOP renaissance where they previously only held 1 seat??? Numbers may not hold but interesting nonetheless, especially as GOP did well elsewhere in NE, especially NH.
11:07: How could so many PA Dem Incumbents lose but there still be a close Senate race? Normally, I don't think campaigns matter much compared to underlying fundamentals but Sestak seems to be proving that wrong.
11:12: $160 million isn't quite enough to win CA Gov's race. Moonbeam back.
11:18: Gene Taylor looks done in MS gulf district. Longtime Blue Dog. Well tanned, great hair, Catholic. Fixture at Capitol Hill haunts Tune Inn and Hawk n Dove. Better settle up on your tab.
11:25: Old Bulls and Dem Committee Chairs Spratt (SC) and Skelton (MO) go down. Two more rural Dems hit the canvas.
11:35: Wave doesn't seem to crest over Mississippi River in Iowa. 3 Dem. House incumbents holding on. Minnesota also holding solid for Dems, plus Gov. pickup. Wisconsin really looking like an outlier now in my mind.
11:39: Scott Brown doesn't improve Massachusetts GOP chances. House delegation stays 10-0 Dem. with win in Delahunt open seat. Deval Patrick re-elected Gov.
11:50: Grandpa voted, junior didn't. Exit polls show a huge shift in turnout based on age compared to 2008.
12:07: No longer the one. John Hall, former lead singer of Orleans, out in NY. Those early NY numbers coming to bear.
12:17: First African American GOP congressman elected since J.C. Watts. Tim Scott wins easily in SC. With Susanna Martinez elected as first ever Hispanic female Governor (NM), is this the most diverse GOP since Reconstruction???
12:28: Reid seems to have it well in hand in NV. Murray hanging on in WA. All things considered, Dems seemed to do better out west. Not sure what this means yet.
I'm going to sign off for tonight. There's a lot to digest and sort through. I may hold off tomorrow to allow me to put something together that isn't stream of consciousness. There will be enough commentary out there to hold you over.
What Will Happen Today
All media accounts and polling suggest that the Democrats are going to get massacred today. That may well be. One of the things that I pride myself, and this blog on, is that I don't make predictions. No better way to look foolish that to make predictions about politics. Rather, I try to rely on the fundamentals. Given my training as a political scientist, there are certain fundamentals when it comes to congressional elections. Namely:
- Midterms are bad for the incumbent President's party.
- Incumbent members of Congress are overwhelmingly re-elected
- Turnout is lower in midterms and favors the out-party, which tends to be more energized
- Minority party gains tend to be concentrated in open seat contests
Beyond these, however, there is another "fundamental" that will probably play the greatest role tonight, although it won't get discussed nearly as much as it should: 10%. The unemployment rate. In all of the commentary on why Republicans will do well, few people--especially Republican flaks--will admit that in many ways their success will be due to factors completely beyond their control. Sophisticated campaign operations, money, targeted GOTV, etc. are in the end ancillary.
I'll be blogging throughout the night as results come in.
Friday, October 15, 2010
ElectionDissection.com Book Club: Daniel Patrick Moynihan: A Portrait In Letters Of An American Visionary
Moynihan's greatest impact, probably, came in the realm of urban and social policy during the 1960s. Some of this work has contributed to how we look at electoral politics. Specifically, Moynihan, along with his longtime collaborator Nathan Glazer, were pioneers in the study of ethnicity. Their seminal work, "Beyond the Melting Pot", explores how different groups--the Irish, Italians, Jews, etc.--competed for and rose to power in New York. Not simply a study of voting and party formation, "Beyond the Melting Pot" is a larger sociology of these groups with a focus on how they assimilated (or have yet to assimilate) into the broader culture. It was Moynihan's attempt to explain the plight of the African American community at the time that is one of the most oft cited aspects of his work, even now several years after his passing. While serving in the Johnson Administration, he authored what has come to be known as the "Moynihan Report." "The Negro Family: The Case for National Action" was an attempt to frame how the government should proceed with social policy aimed at impoverished African Americans. Focusing on the historical factors that, he believed, led to a decline in the stability of black families, Moynihan's analysis can be read as a warning shot to liberal policymakers who believe that the right program can solve complicated, entrenched, and long standing problems. In the aftermath of the study's release, Moynihan was vilified by many on the left for, at best, "blaming the victim" or being a high brow racist. A reading of the report (which many of its critics failed to do) doesn't really bear these critiques out. What it shows, however, is how social science and politics oftentimes create a very explosive mixture. Given the social upheaval of the period and the hegemonic Great Society liberalism of the Johnson years, Moynihan's willingness to raise tough questions from inside the tent left him scarred for quite a long time, if not the remainder of his life.
Having been stung by the reaction to the Moynihan Report, especially from so many of his friends and colleagues on the left, Moynihan spent much of the late 60's and early 70's further engaged in critiques of liberal shibboleths. The fact that he did this from within Republican administrations makes his career all the more fascinating. How one reads this part of his career--was he trying to fight the good fight for liberalism within the enemy camp or was he increasingly a traitor to his roots?--depends, I suppose, on one's willingness to give Moynihan the benefit of the doubt. He would have perhaps said that he did not so much leave the Democratic Party as much as it left him. In the field of social policy, it is quite clear that the policies Nixon supported--i.e. a guaranteed income--not only had Moynihan's fingerprints on them but would be inconceivable in a Republican administration today.
After his ambassadorial stints, Moynihan sought the Democratic Senate nomination in New York in 1976. In a heavily contested primary, Moynihan won by about 7,000 votes over his top challenger, Representative Bella Abzug--she of the fiery personality and big hats. The race also featured former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark and NYC Council President Paul O'Dwyer. As an aside, I should probably devote an entire post to Abzug at some point. She features prominently in another fascinating Democratic primary of the era, the 1977 NYC mayoral contest that also featured Mario Cuomo and Ed Koch. For a great primer on that race, check out Jonathan Mahler's "Ladies and Gentlemen, The Bronx is Burning." Anyhow, in the general election Moynihan went on to defeat Republican incumbent James Buckley (brother of William F., himself a frequent debating foil of Moynihan). Once ensconced in the Senate, Moynihan was never seriously challenged for re-election. He won 65% and 67% in 1982 and 1988 respectively. In the Republican landslide of 1994 that saw his co-Empire State Democrat Mario Cuomo dispatched from the Governor's mansion, Moynihan won quite easily with 55%.
As I mentioned above, Moynihan's legislative record doesn't seem to square with his ambitions. This retrospective on his career, published on the eve of his retirement in 2000, explores some of the reasons. I like to think that some of his failures can be attributed to his training as a social scientist. As one myself, I know that we're often better at pointing out what's wrong with a proposition than what's right with it. Every graduate student gets quite proficient at deconstructing, critiquing, and picking apart someone else's work. Thus, someone like Moynihan could quite easily look at a state of affairs--say persistent urban poverty--and quickly ascertain what has gone wrong in the past, what will probably go wrong in the future, and conclude that attempting to change it is futile (especially if the proposed change is sweeping). To many, this would make Moynihan a "conservative." The fact that he spent much of his time in the liberal wilderness kibitzing with the likes of Irving Kristol and other "neo-conservatives" perhaps gives some credence to this. That aside, this temperament also makes legislating difficult. To successfully push policy through the Senate one needs to be willing to both suspend belief about the shortcomings of one's ideas (what won't work) and also find ways to get others on board. In short, you need to be an optimist, a salesman, and a trader. Thus, Moynihan seemed destined to be the "brain" or the Senate without exercising much of the "brawn."
Having said that, one shouldn't conclude that Moynihan was a failed or unsuccessful Senator. There is a tremendous value in having someone who can provide the institution and other senators with what we might call "context." While Moynihan may have struck people as pedantic and somewhat windy, one can't deny that he brought to the debate a tremendous amount of substance. There should be a place for people like this in politics. That Moynihan was able to be both professorial and a tremendous vote getter is quite remarkable. In reflecting on his career and now diving into his until now unpublished correspondence, I can't help but lament the fact that he seems like a relic of a bygone era. Despite the fact that he's been out of office only a decade, the current political environment seems to have regressed to a point that a Daniel Patrick Moynihan would be un-electable. Our politics is worse off for that. Can you imagine twitter.com/dpmoynihan???
For some more on Moynihan, check out these interviews:
CSPAN "Life and Career of Daniel Patrick Moynihan" from 1987
Charlie Rose from 1998
Charlie Rose from 1996
Charlie Rose following Moynihan's death
Sunday, October 10, 2010
A Visit To Antietam: Why the Civil War Matters
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Maptastic
Thursday, September 16, 2010
The Rise and Fall of Adrian Fenty: Can Washington DC Become "One City"???
This is what a polarized electorate, and indeed city, looks like. Now two days out from the DC’s mayor’s race that saw once popular incumbent Adrian Fenty thrown out in favor of City Council Chair Vince Gray, the post mortems are starting to come in and explanations are starting to crystallize (full results here). The reasons being offered for the downfall of Fenty point to the variables of race, class, geography, and personality as all playing a role. The Washington Post focused on the "character" aspect yesterday. Like most elections that see numerous streams intersect to produce an outcome, there’s probably some truth to all of these. I want to try and flesh them out a bit, while also pointing something unique to DC that I think provided the underlying context for the outcome. For a less nuanced analysis, Courtland Milloy hammers at Fenty today.
When Adrian Fenty was first elected Mayor in 2006 as a young, energetic Ward 4 councilman, he promised an administration dedicated, above all else, to results driven reform (see 2006 results here). The abysmal school system would be reformed; city services would be streamlined; ossified bureaucracies would be shaken up. Whereas previous administrations (i.e. Marion Barry) were staffed through patronage, Fenty’s government would be one where technocrats were in ascendance. The personification of this shift was the new school chancellor Michelle Rhee. Given a wide mandate to institute sweeping changes, Rhee has set about a radical, and some would argue much needed, reorganization and reconceptualization of education in the nation’s capital.
Coupled with this reform mindset was Fenty’s reputation for energy and constituent service. The mayor had made his climb through retail politics. He would not be outworked and was visible and accessible. With multiple blackberries holstered to his hip, he could beckon city workers at the drop of a hat to respond to potholes, piled up garbage, or a city park in need of repair. Implicit in this was the feeling on the part of citizens that they mattered. Fenty was reaching out to them, wanting to know what they needed. Not locked up in the Wilson Building, he was a man of the streets, more comfortable shuttling around the city’s neighborhoods than behind a desk. He was a fixer, yes, but also someone who cared about and understood the community.
Four years later, Mayor Fenty is no more. What happened, I think, is that these two aims—reform and service—could not be balanced. Fenty’s personality and style, no doubt, played some role in this. As much of the coverage of his administration has attested to, his drive to change the city was most often done without the input and participation of those who would feel the brunt of his efforts. He was brash, arrogant, and short tempered, yet decisive and forward looking. As long as things got “better,” the assumption was that city would respond, despite the fact that they no longer felt courted by the Mayor. Rather than the Mayor showing up at your door, it would be the improved Washington through better schools, roads, and facilities that would greet you every day.
Unfortunately, “better” can be defined differently and here is where we start to see the polarization of the city come into view. Let’s take the issue of employment. Washington, DC has vastly different levels of unemployment depending at what part of the city one looks. Interestingly, and perhaps not surprisingly, these levels correspond to the pattern of Tuesday’s vote. The wards with the highest unemployment in the city—8, 7, and 5—were the wards where Gray’s numbers were highest. Those with the lowest unemployment—3 and 2—saw Fenty claim 70-80% of the vote. When you aren’t worried about losing your job (Ward 3's unemployment rate is 3%) dog parks, bike lanes, and lavish parks are a nice perk. When you are struggling with 25-30% unemployment rates in your neighborhood, they’re a slap in the face, an extravagance. When the Mayor is tone deaf about this to the point of rationalizing it, people are probably going to notice. As city budgets have been trimmed in the midst of economic difficulties, those in the eastern parts of the city have come to question Fenty’s priorities and whether they are being focused on the affluent of upper Northwest at the expense of those east of the Anacostia. Rather than post-material amenities, these neighborhoods cry for job training and basic services. There is not a single functioning hospital in all of Wards 7 and 8.
In this, race obviously becomes a factor. There is an almost perfect correlation between Tuesday’s vote and the distribution of the DC population by race. While there was no formal exit polling done on Tuesday, the evidence suggests that Fenty won by a roughly 4:1 margin in the predominantly white neighborhoods while Gray won by the same margin in the predominantly black neighborhoods. It is not correct to say, however, that race was the only variable that mattered. It’s a bit more muddled, and why I think we need to look at things like unemployment and the like. Remember, just four years ago Fenty won the support of both white and black voters. He won every precinct in the city. What has happened is that not every part of the city has benefited from Fenty’s changes, at least as they perceive them. Again, what “better” or “results” mean is open to debate. What also matters is how those results are achieved.
Here is where some context matters—and this is an angle I haven’t seen explored a whole lot. One thing that is unique about Washington, DC is its governing structure and history. As the nation’s capital, Washington has only recently gotten relatively full control over its own internal affairs. It was only in 1967 that we received some measure of “home rule,” allowing us to elect our Mayor. An elected City Council did not arrive until a few years later. Prior to that, Washington was ruled by a three person, federally appointed, Board of Commissioners. Prior to Home Rule, and even since, Washington has been overseen by Congress. Every piece of legislation passed by the city government is subject to congressional veto. Thus, in recent years Washington has not only had to have its duly elected representatives’ decisions subject to the whims of the congressional membership (with DC residents becoming a partisan football), but has also found itself as the laboratory in which members can pursue their pet agendas. On issues like gun control, gay marriage, needle exchange, and school choice, Washingtonians often feel as if they aren’t really in control. The height of this came during the 1990’s when Congress instituted a control board to run all of the District’s finances.
Why this matters, I think, is that many district residents are particularly attuned to their role in governing the city. Here is where age becomes an interesting variable. Many of Fenty’s supporters are younger, new arrivals to the city. They didn’t live here prior to Home Rule or the Control Board and so they probably aren’t as sensitive to slights from City Hall. For them, “results” are more important than “process.” For those older residents who have lived in DC their whole lives, being excluded from governing is going to be reminiscent of when the city was powerless. I’ll use the example of my neighborhood here. Earlier this year I moved into Ward 5, Precinct 69. This part of Washington DC is predominantly African American, with long time, older residents making up, at least anecdotally to me, the largest part of the population. Back when the campaign was starting to heat up, Vince Gray signs sprouted up throughout the neighborhoods of Brookland, Woodridge, and Michigan Park like mushrooms. These neighborhoods aren’t poor but they aren’t the cosmopolitan, young, and thriving DuPont Circle either. While only separated about twenty minutes or so by car, Brookland and DuPont can feel like totally separate worlds. Where Fenty seems to have lost these neighborhoods, it seems to me, is that he forgot how these folks have experienced their city—and their role in it—over the years.
In no other way is this better seen than in how Fenty approached the schools. When the Mayor was given the ability to control education and subsequently appointed Michelle Rhee he made it clear that results where going to be the measure of success. If teachers needed to be fired, schools consolidated and closed, and the teacher’s union weakened, so be it. Despite the merits of doing all of these, the blunt force with which this agenda was pursued ran straight into this legacy and history of how the city used to be governed. While it may seem like dull, tedious “process” to include neighbors in these decisions (beyond town hall meetings and listening sessions), for those whose children and neighborhoods that are affected, this “process” is the most intimate involvement they will have with their city’s decision making. That it affects their kids makes it even more critical that they feel invested. In short, I get the sense that for longtime Washingtonians Michelle Rhee is merely the latest incarnation of the Board of Commissioners or the Control Board—an outsider who thinks they know what’s best for the city despite the fact that they didn’t grow up here. The fact that Rhee hasn't hesitated to talk about the national implications of her work in DC makes things worse. A parent living in a struggling neighborhood and who is worried about their son or daughter's schooling doesn't care about a grand experiment in education. They care about their kid. If you're going to dramatically change the schools, you need to have the trust of the community--parents, teachers, alumni, neighborhood leaders, etc. As Matt Yglesias argues (as does Washington City Paper's Mike Madden), Rhee and Fenty never really did the work to create that trust. Ultimately, Fenty paid the price for that failing.
Thus, I can’t say that I’m at all surprised by the outcome, its magnitude, and the geographic/racial/class/age chasm that we see. Washington, DC is certainly two, if not many, cities. Governing it is never going to be easy, especially when you’re trying to make big changes. The ultimate failing of Adrian Fenty is not that he tried to change the city and make it better, its that he didn’t figure out the right way to do it.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Quick Hits
Delaware just goes to O'Donnell. Castle's 44 years of public service comes to an end. Despite Tea Party enthusiasm, this result must make Democrats ecstatic. Delaware native Dave Weigel is worth following for analysis, in Twitter short form.
Wisconsin results can be followed here.
9:50 pm:
Gotta say, Wisconsin GOP primary is a lot closer than I'd have guessed. Only 5% in, albeit, but Walker with a slim lead. Wish I knew where those results were from. This would be a pretty big upset.
10:00 pm:
Also interested in Rangel/Powell contest in NY. Harlem politics can be fascinating, especially when familial revenge is at stake. No numbers yet.
10:40 pm:
Come on DC. I'm going to be ticked if everything comes out at once. I like the suspense of results trickling in bit by bit.
10:50 pm:
A nice piece by Weigel on the now defeated Mike Castle. He's reporting that O'Donnell is toast even before the applause of tonight dies down.
Drip, Drip, Drip... DC starts coming in.
11:00 pm:
With a 14 point lead and 37% reporting, Wisconsin GOP Gov primary has been called for Scott Walker. Not a surprise there. Will set up an interesting general in that, historically, Wisconsin does not pick their governors from Milwaukee. Now they will.
11:25:
Here we go. Twitter to the rescue. Mike Debonis w/precinct results for DC in real time.
11:30 pm:
Once again, people in New York just don't like Rick Lazio.
12:00 am:
Just a hunch, but this map is probably going to be useful in understanding the Fenty/Gray numbers.
12:10 am:
Rangel wins comfortably.
12:30 am:
The numbers coming out of Ward 4 don't look good for Fenty. If he can't win his home ward, he's probably cooked.
1:15 am:
The Washington Post is reporting a Vince Gray win. The numbers aren't fully out, but unless we have a 2000-like snafu, this seems pretty definitive. Good enough for me to head to bed. Some bloggers have real jobs.
Lots of analysis to come tomorrow.
Around Town As DC Votes
Precinct 66: Backus Middle School
Precinct 67: Bunker Hill Elementary School
Nice violin playing--patriotic music to serenade the voting.
Precinct 68: St. Francis Hall--Franciscan Monastery
Campaign volunteers were reporting relatively light turnout. With DC now having early voting, it was difficult to ascertain whether people were taking advantage of voting early, or whether enthusiasm and motivation was down. Once we start to get some numbers, we'll be better able to answer this question.
Busy Primary Day, With An Emphasis On D.C. Mayor's Race
That, of course, was before the year of the Tea Party. Over the past several weeks, Castle has seen his sure thing become much more precarious as Christine O'Donnell, fueled by a Sarah Palin endorsement and a slew of out of state funding and manpower, has tightened the race. Like earlier contests in Utah and Alaska, which saw incumbent GOP Senators defeated, tonight's contest in the First State could provide fireworks. The winner faces Chris Coons, New Castle County Executive.
Closer to home, the big tilt today is the DC Democratic mayoral primary (Washington Post blog coverage here). Given the underlying political affiliation of DC voters, this is the whole shebang. The winner will be the mayor. Watching this race up close over the past months, this race has become fascinating. The incumbent, Adrian Fenty shot to prominence four years ago through a retail politics performance par excellance. He won every precinct in the city, casting himself as a results oriented reformer. As is so often the case with reformers, patience and prudence take a back seat to action. The flashpoint in all of this has been Fenty's efforts to reform the long moribund DC education system. Under Chancellor Michelle Rhee, Fenty has overseen a mayoral takeover of the school system and a process of school consolidation and widespread teacher firings--with test scores both improving and ebbing as a result. In a nutshell, Fenty has been highly polarizing, especially among DC's older establishment. His opponent, City Council Chair Vince Gray has campaigned on the notion of "One City." To supporters, he will bind back together what Fenty has blown up. To detractors, he will be a throwback to the dysfunction of latter day Marion Berry/Control Board DC government. The prevailing view of the underlying dynamics of this race suggests that race and age are the faultlines upon which the election will be decided. Fenty has tended to draw his support from white, more educated, and younger voters whereas Grey is seen as strongest among African American and, especially, older voters.
John has been doing yeoman's work looking at this race from the ground level--see here, here, and here. We're both going to try and get out today to capture some of what's going on at various polling places. I'm also going to post as results start coming in later tonight.
Also of note today is the GOP gubernatorial primary in Wisconsin. Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker is taking on former 1st District Congressman and one time Senate candidate Mark Neumann. The winner will take on Milwaukee Mayor and former 5th District Congressman Tom Barrett in the general.
UPDATE: As the results start coming in tonight, we're going to get very focused on the micro level for the DC mayor's race. Here's a DC ward and precinct map so you can play along at home. If the race shakes out as predicted, expect to see Gray do extremely well in Wards 5, 7 (his home), and 8. Fenty can be expected to do well in Wards 2 and 3. His home Ward 4 could be the real bellwether. Wards 1 and 6 should be relatively competitive too I would think.
John and I are going to hit some of the precincts in Ward 5 to get some local flavor. Hopefully we'll have some pictures to go along with the numbers. This should be Gray territory big time.
Monday, August 16, 2010
The 1864 Wisconsin Vote: Where the Copperheads Were
For the 1864 election, the report election returns down to, where relevant, the town, ward, and precinct level (!!!). From this, we can explore the relative levels of support for Abraham Lincoln and the Democratic nominee, General George McClellan. What I'm particularly interested in is how the war, and its progress by 1864, affected support for Lincoln. One thing that those familiar with the war know is how the military success of the north and south ebbed and flowed throughout the conflict. While by 1864 the north had achieved some notable successes (i.e. Gettysburg), the war was far from over and a sort of weariness had crept into northern circles. Politically, Lincoln was seen as highly vulnerable. For the duration of the war he had been trying to balance a coalition of Radical Republicans, pro-war Democrats, and border state fence-sitters. The defection of any of these groups could not only lead to the collapse of his government, but perhaps the Union as well. For any President trying to manage a coalition, any decision or action is likely to upset one camp while not fully pleasing the other--a no win situation in even the most peaceful times. The 1864 election was thus a test of whether or not the country would be willing to see the war to its conclusion or whether increasingly vocal anti-war northerners would be able to change the direction of country.
Indeed, the fact that Lincoln's re-nomination took place under the banner of the "Union Republican" Party and not the still fledgling "Republican" label is an indication of how worried northern pro-war politicos were of the coalition's splintering. The coupling of Lincoln with pro-war Tennessee Democrat Andrew Johnson as the VP nominee is further illustration of this delicate dance taking place among those trying to re-elect the President. Ultimately, Republicans were aided by the fact that the Democrats seemed to have a difficult time fielding a candidate that was 1) anti-war, or at least skeptical of the Lincoln administration's efforts and 2) viable in an electorate that had thousands of its sons, brothers, and fathers currently engaged in the fight. The fact that the Democrats ultimately settled on the popular, yet handily pro-war McClellan shows how hard it was going to be defeat Lincoln, despite public unease with the pace of the war. (We could devote a lot of time to McClellan as a General and how his dismissal by Lincoln may have played into the politics of his nomination and campaign, but we'll set that aside for now).
Those northern elements allied against the war are normally identified as "Copperheads." While being largely pro-Union, Copperheads were oftentimes driven against the war by its increasingly abolitionist tenor. With the issuing of the Emancipation Proclamation after the Union victory at Antietam, many northerners felt that the war's efforts were being directed for more ambitious purposes than those originally sold to them by Lincoln. This question of "why" the war was being fought is one that I'm going to hopefully address in my next post. Until then, its worth noting that northern feelings about abolition were decidedly mixed, especially in certain segments of the electorate. When the manpower needs of the Union army were such that volunteer regiments would have to be supplemented by conscription, draft riots in such places as New York demonstrated how difficult it would be to lead men into battle under the banner of ending slavery.
In doing some background reading on the Copperhead movement, I've been spending some time with the writing of Frank Klement, a historian who used to teach at my alma mater. In his writing on the subject, Klement talks a lot about how the Copperhead movement had a strong ethnic dimension to it. Specifically, Copperheadism tended to take root in many parts of the midwest that had a strong German and Irish Catholic population. Writing in "Catholics as Copperheads During the Civil War," he argues:
The Republican party, founded during the 1850's as Whiggery disintegrated, became the home of three isms: prohibitionism, abolitionism, and Know-Nothingism. Irish-Americans and German-Americans detested each of the three, oftentimes reacting emotionally...The Irish and German-Americans detested abolitionism, for they feared that emancipation would release a flood of cheap labor that would threaten their very livelihood. (The Catholic Historical Review. January 1994. p. 36).
Midwestern voters tended to also be drawn to Copperheadism for economic reasons. Heavily agricultural, these regions relied on southern markets for their livelihood. As the war dragged on, and especially as the Mississippi River blockade shut off southern markets, many sought an end to the war as soon as possible.
When we take all of this into account when looking at one particular state--Wisconsin--what do we see??? With the data I've created the following color coded map to show the support of Lincoln (red) and McClellan (blue) on a county by county basis. Statewide, Lincoln won Wisconsin with 52.4% of the vote. He won 35 counties to McClellan's 22.
McClellan's main area of strength was Milwaukee and its surrounding counties--the urban center of the state. Winning 68% of Milwaukee county his 3700 margin there was the largest margin of victory for either candidate in any county. Neighboring Washington and Ozaukee counties gave McClellan an additional 4058 vote margin.
Aside from these areas being populous, what else does this part of the state have, that is relevant to this discussion??? German Americans. Check out the following map that shows the prevalence of German Americans in Civil War era Wisconsin:
Not only were German-Americans present in great numbers in those counties that gave McClellan his greatest support, the German presence throughout the state was immense. In fact, those who were either German born themselves, or had at least one German born parent, comprised over 1/3 of the entire state's population. In the ethnic mosaic of Wisconsin, Germans were the dominant group.
While not nearly as large as the German bloc, Wisconsin did see considerable Irish immigration as well. As Klement noted, this group was also likely to be sympathetic to Copperhead critiques of the war. Looking at a map of Wisconsin's Irish population, the correlation isn't quite as stark as we saw with the Germans.
In my next post I want to explore another facet of the 1864 vote: that of the soldiers themselves. Here, the question of how salient the issues of the war and emancipation will be at the forefront. Were those actually doing the fighting more likely to support Lincoln or were they, perhaps, ready for the war to end? Would they support their previous, and beloved commander, McClellan? Might it depend upon which group of soldiers we're looking at? Finally, we'll have something to say about the mechanics of how soldiers in the field actually voted--and whether this might have affected their choice. Stay tuned.
**Above maps from Richard N. Current. The History of Wisconsin. Volume II. The Civil War Era.
Friday, July 30, 2010
Secession Dissection in the Old Dominion. Or, Where West Virginia Came From
As must be noted, Virginia was actually quite hesitant to secede. A number of efforts were made to keep Virginia in the Union, with an early Secession Convention sending a delegation to Washington to try and ascertain the Lincoln administration's intentions. When Sumter was met with Lincoln's determination to meet Southern hostilities with force, Virginia's march to leave the Union picked up pace. On April 17, Virginia's Secession Convention voted to secede, with the final decision subject to a statewide referendum. With the data for this vote available on a county-wide basis, I thought I'd map it to see if any patterns emerge.
In the last post I tried to show a linkage between secession support across the South with the prevalence of slavery. For the purposes of this post, lets do the same thing. Our hypothesis would be that those parts of Virginia that had a higher prevalence of slavery would have a higher level of support for the secession referendum. Fortunately, I found a good map of Virginia that shows slavery by county that we can use:
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Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Civil War Secession Maps
I'm currently in the midst of Shelby Foote's magisterial three volume history of the Civil War. This is a project that will probably be completed in fits and starts over the months ahead, especially as other things capture my attention. Anyhow, an interesting electoral story is that of the secession votes held across the south in the wake of Lincoln's election and the subsequent firing on Ft. Sumter in early 1861. The first wave of states to secede were South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Louisiana, Florida, and Texas. The second wave (following Ft. Sumter) comprised the states of Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas. I found this interesting map to give a sense of secession sympathy in these states:
What the history of this period tells us is that support for secession was by no means universal. Many of these deep south states had pockets of people loyal to the union (or at least not enthusiastic about secession). A classic example of this is Tennessee, which to this day has strongly Republican leaning counties in the eastern part of the state that never became part of the Solid South for Democrats. Also of note is the part of Virginia that would ultimately break off to form the new state of West Virginia.The most common explanation for this diversity of opinion regarding secession in these states relates to the presence or reliance upon slave labor. In Alabama, for example, the northern most counties tended to have very little slaveholding. With a geography and topography that wasn't conducive to cotton or other labor intensive crops, secessionist feelings were less intense than in places like South Carolina or the Mississippi Delta. Consider these maps of slavery's pervasiveness in the region with the above to get a sense of these very interesting dynamics.
If you're interested in the Civil War and have some time on your hands, I'd highly recommend Yale historian David Blight's course on the period. Its absolutely amazing and worth the time it takes to get through all of the lectures.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Sometimes You Can't Make This Stuff Up
Monday, June 07, 2010
The Difference Between Political Journalism and Political Science
Wednesday, June 02, 2010
How Not to Navigate the Primary/General Two-Step. Or, Did Artur Davis Have Any Choice Than to Move Right???
Among yesterday's primary results, probably the most interesting was on the Democratic side in Alabama's governor's race. For a long time I've been puzzling over the candidacy of Artur Davis, currently (but not for long) the House member from the state's 7th District, centered around Birnmingham. For many national observers, Davis was seen as a shining light. The Harvard educated African American was envisioned as kind of a southern Obama--pragmatic, clear-eyed, and electable. First elected in 2002, Davis secured a coveted seat on the Ways and Means Committee and even got some talk as a potential Attorney General before Eric Holder got the nod.This year, Davis mounted a campaign for Governor and in doing so had to figure out how to win both a primary (which necessarily entails catering to a more liberal audience) and the general in a state that has been pretty hostile to Democrats--at least state wide--in recent years. As an African American candidate, given the state's history, the job was all the more difficult. Davis' strategy seemed to be to tack to the right during the primary season in the belief that he could engender himself to the moderate voters he would need in the general. Davis was one of the few House Democrats to vote against the Health Care Reform Bill and during the campaign went to great lengths to distance himself from President Obama. Likewise, as much of the coverage of the race makes clear, Davis also decided not to court Alabama's black political brokers.
What happened?? Yesterday he got crushed by State Agriculture Commissioner Ron Sparks. Sparks won 62% of the vote and 62 of the state's 67 counties. Sparks filled the vacuum created by Davis' passivity toward the black community, winning a sizable percentage of the black vote. He was endorsed by several of the state's leading liberal organizations, including the powerful teacher's union, in a campaign that moved leftward while Davis moved right.
In the post mortems being written today, Davis' strategy is being decried. By focusing on moderates he was, the argument goes, putting the cart before the horse. Primaries and generals are very different animals. They bring out different electorates, emphasize different issues oftentimes, and thus require different strategies and coalitions. Candidates who try to win both elections with one strategy--given these differences--oftentimes fail. What is worth thinking about, however, is whether a candidate like Davis had any other choice than to move rightward as soon as he could. Given the state's history and political profile, can a left of center African American win statewide?
Alabama Primary Coverage:
Montgomery Advertiser
Birmingham News
Washington Post
Fivethirtyeight.com
Talkingpointsmemo.com
County by County results
County Results Map
Monday, May 17, 2010
Out of the Darkness
Stay tuned.















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