Sunday, May 07, 2006

Politician Poll Watchers And Their Folly

Over the past several weeks, much of the political talk has been centered around the Democrats' chances of retaking Congress from the Republicans, in this year's midterms. Democrats are beginning to sense widespread disenchantment with Congress and are beginning to feel some confidence. And much of this new-found optimism has been discovered through opinion polls, which have become the guiding principles of the modern-day politician, for as long as I can remember.

The Dems use them religiously and are starting to believe they are indicative of a positive outcome, for them. The GOP isn't much different in poll usage and its leadership has to know that according to these polls, this a distinct possibility.

As I have said before,
opinion polls do not count for much of anything, if you really think about it. They do not seat elected officials. Elections do. All they do, is create a snapshot of how people feel at that particular point in time and measure popularity (or lack of), in a moment that people cannot cast that vote. But the pols rely very heavily on these tools, despite this fact. So to understand where I am going with this, let's look at a clip from the first link I have provided, at WaPo:

Democratic leaders, increasingly confident they will seize control of the House in November, are laying plans for a legislative blitz during their first week in power that would raise the minimum wage, roll back parts of the Republican prescription drug law, implement homeland security measures and reinstate lapsed budget deficit controls.

Today, we are six months out from the general election.

Yet, the Democrats are starting to become a bit smug about the unfavorable ratings that come out week after week, excoriating both the President and Congress, despite the fact that disapproval ratings apply to them, as well. I mean, who says that the person being polled (the ones that says they disapprove of how Congress is doing) likes Pelosi's performance, any better than say, Dennis Hastert's?

Yes, Hastert is in power, but the polls rarely reflect this variable. In fact, the polls are very often skewed by leaving out critical information of this nature.
Let's look at this clip from an article from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, at RCP:

There are lots of ways to look at public-opinion polls, all of them flawed. Almost no topic stuffed with numbers is so rife with ambiguity, so ripe for overinterpretation, so vulnerable to bias. The act of examining poll numbers is neither art nor science. It is something less than each of those.

So, what does this mean?

The Dems are getting confident. By the time November rolls around, maybe they will be overconfident. You have to admit, they sure portrayed that image in 2004. So much so, that many had hung their heads in disbelief when it was known that the President was re-elected. Some didn't accept it and started with the "GOP stole the election" rhetoric, almost immediately. But for those that did accept it,
there was a marked spike in Democrats going to therapists immediately after their loss was realized.

I would not be so bold to say that the Dems have no chance, though. They do.

People are not happy with the GOP and that includes many that are party people. And in this weak two party system, there isn't much of a choice for them, other than the Dems. Even those that won't/don't vote for a Democrat and may cast their vote for a lesser known party as a protest, can still affect the election. They can still put Democrats in office, without even voting for them.

But if the Dems think they are going to waltz into office by using their past two platforms, which were nothing more than accusations, they are not going to win. They cannot keep beating the Abu Ghraib, no WMDs, and the domestic surveillance programs stories (over and over) and expect the American electorate to embrace them anymore than they have, in the recent past. Moderates (the ones that swing elections) will not buy into that. They didn't in 04, they won't this year, and for sure it will not work in 08.


And the Republicans had better do some serious re-tooling and re-thinking. They had better stop wasting time and start getting some things done. You know what I mean, the the things that they said they would do if they were elected/re-elected. Social Security, cut spending, and so on. If you cannot get stuff done, when you are in the majority, what's the use of being in the majority?

But the one issue that will be the defining factor in who wins and who loses is, controlling the border. An overwhelming majority of Americans believe there should be a fence. That means both Democrats and Republicans, alike, need to step up and make some hard decisions real soon. Or, their little two party reign may come to and end. Dems need to stop looking at the potential votes and te GOP needs to stop looking at the cheap labor. Special interests may give the money, but the people cast the ballots.

Congress wants to buy votes so bad, with a feel-good $100 gas tax rebate. How about taking that money and building a fence? I know I will gladly donate my $100, if that's where it will go.

So the bottom line is: If you read this and you are a member of Congress, or you are one of those party hacks that handle them, it's the border, stupid. Throw every one those other damned polls away. Because until you get that one right, no one will be guaranteed to keep their jobs. No one.

If not this year, in 2008.

4 comments:

All_I_Can_Stands said...

The Dems are getting confident. By the time November rolls around, maybe they will be overconfident.

The left ALWAYS overplays their hand. What this means is that the left knows what they want and wait, and wait until some shred of opportunity comes to drive home their preconceived notions. Their impatience during the wait and the ensuing adrenaline rush when it comes always causes them to burst forth in an uncontrolled manner that always goes over the edge.

This is the only thing that has saved the GOP during the GOP's failure to realize they are in the majority and take the reins.

LA Sunset said...

Their impatience during the wait and the ensuing adrenaline rush when it comes always causes them to burst forth in an uncontrolled manner that always goes over the edge.

Also known as the Howard Dean Syndrome. Formerly known as Impulsive Mouth Syndrome.

A.C. McCloud said...

You beat me to it. I was gonna post on this same thing today, but I'll just reply here instead.

Agree the democrats think they have it wrapped up. And they might--many of my conservative friends are absolutely fed up with the repubs right now.

Was just talking with a few tonight who believe we need to vote some democrats into the House to keep the govt gridlocked, because it's evident the repubs have gravitated to their real base--big business.
That means they cannot possibly fix the border.

Yet the thought of allowing Pelosi and Reid to control Congress is pretty sickening. As you posted awhile back, it's time for a legitimate 3rd party--or replacement 2nd party, and now.

LA Sunset said...

You beat me to it. I was gonna post on this same thing today, but I'll just reply here instead.

Sometimes I will put up a post and look at other blogs afterward only to see the same topic and the same points. Then I wonder if they think I stole the idea from them. But actually, it's just a case of great minds thinking alike.