The Presidential Election. Paul Beck, The Ohio State University Lifelong Learning Institute December 7, 2016

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Transcription:

The Presidential Election Paul Beck, The Ohio State University Lifelong Learning Institute December 7, 2016 1

Introduction: Fundamentals of the 2016 Presidential Contests 2016 presidential results with a few states still counting (Table 1) Trump won electoral vote majority o Trump swept most of battleground states, albeit narrowly o Clinton wins if 103,000 more votes in MI, PA, and WI Clinton won popular vote by 2.6 million States key constituencies for presidential elections Party nominees selected at national conventions, whose delegates chosen in states President chosen by Electoral College, electors allocated to states and chosen in states 3 prominent features of national politics at start of 2016 1. 50-50 nation 2. Even division of partisans, who are polarized o Democrats slightly > Republicans (Figure 1) o Why partisanship matters: partisans vote party, polarize in evaluations, engage in partisan motivated reasoning 3. Widespread dissatisfaction (Figure 2) à anti-establishment headwinds favoring change o Previous satisfaction lows à rejection of incumbent party, except 2012 o Fueled Sanders and Trump challenges to establishment o Put Clinton, epitome of establishment, in difficult position, with 2016 shaping up as GOP year 2

Table 1 Presidential Election Results (as of 12/5/16) 3

Figure 1 Party Identifications of Americans, 2016 Source: Pew Center for the People and the Press, January to August surveys 4

Figure 2 Satisfaction with the Way Things Are Going in the U.S. Source: Gallup Poll: 1989 thru Sept 2016, http://www.gallup.com/poll/1669/general-mood-country.aspx 5

3 Features of 2016 U.S. Presidential Nominations 1. Conventions nominate, by majority vote of delegates Delegates elected in primaries/caucuses: selected by candidates and often pledged on 1 st ballot Democratic super-delegates (15% of total) are free agents Convention decides rules of convention Delegates allocated by formula based on population and party strength (thru past votes) 2. State rules vary (Table 2) Timing of contests Type of contest: party caucuses vs. government primaries Conversion of votes into delegates: PR vs winner take all (statewide or district) Who participates: open vs closed 3. 2016 is year of outsider à non-establishment candidates Trump and Sanders Voter dissatisfaction with establishment Sources of support for party outsiders o Trump drew from most voter groups, especially white working class males o Sanders drew best from younger voters Trump nomination, Sanders challenge show permeability of parties, not invisible primary 6

Table 2 2016 state/dc Primary and Caucus Schedule and Rules 7

2016 Nominations in Retrospect Nomination process selects delegates, who nominate by majority vote Primaries overlaid on traditional convention/caucus system o Delegates selected by old procedures o States and state parties decide process within national party guidelines National party reforms since 1968 addressed past problems: o Moved to primaries in most states o Democratic super-delegates to give party establishment more role o Democratic PR to give minority candidates greater representation at convention o Diminished frontloading: 2016 contests began month later, Republicans forced to use PR before March 15 2016 Stress Test: highlighted difference between delegate selection and popular votes Results were decisive (Figure 3): Trump and Clinton easily had majority of delegates by convention, Trump without winning majority of popular vote Was process rigged? How might it be reformed? Bind delegates more tightly to popular vote (greater need for GOP than Dems)? Eliminate/add super-delegates (add for GOP, drop for Dems)? Low-turnout caucus vs primary (14 Dem, 12 Rep states held caucuses)? Open vs closed caucus/primary (25 Dem, 26 Rep states closed)? Winner take all (WTA) vs. PR (GOP back to WTA)? 8

Figure 3 2016 Nomination Process Results before Conventions (AP Delegate Estimates as of 6/26/16) 9

Basic Features of the 2016 General Election Presidential elections decided in ~dozen battleground states (CO, FL, IA, MI, NC, NH, NV, OH, PA, VA, WI + AZ in 2016) Fewer voters satisfied with major party candidates than since 1992 (Figure 4) No attractive third-party safety valve ; third-party type secured GOP nomination Difficult choice for many voters, voting against rather than for Higher % than before still undecided week before election Overall turnout (as % of VEP) for president 58.6% in 2016 vs 61.6% in 2008, and 58.0% in 2012 1.17 million did not vote for president, slightly less dropoff than in 2008 and 2012 10

Figure 4 % Very/fairly Satisfied with Presidential Candidates source: Pew Research Center, July 7, 2016 11

Who Voted for Which Candidate: A View from the Exit Polls Major 2016 stories (Figure 5): 1. Class-vote relationship upside down o Majority of college educated white women for Clinton o Gender gap between men and women, both college educated and not 2. Urban-rural divide: Trump won most counties nationwide Demographic comparisons, 2016 vs. 2012 (Figure 6) Dems lost ground to Reps: men, minorities, non-college grads, union HHs Both parties lost ground (to 3 rd -party candidates) among women and all ages Dems up, Reps down among college grads Political orientation comparisons, 2016 vs 2012 (Figure 7) Republicans (and Democrats) came home, though not as much as in 2012 Republicans did better among evangelicals and (slightly overall) late deciders Republican advantage re dissatisfaction: o more saw US on wrong track (62% vs 52% in 2012), even if did not vote as heavily for Trump o slightly fewer more saw personal finances worse (27% vs 33%), but voted just as heavily for Trump 12

Figure 5 2016 Vote by Key Demographics Source: Exit Polls, 2016 13

Figure 6 Vote by Demographics, 2016 vs 2012 Source: Exit Polls, 2012 and 2016 14

Figure 7 Vote by Political Orientations, 2016 vs 2012 Source: Exit Polls, 2012 and 2016 15

Voting Patterns Beyond Exit Polls: Turnout and Comey Turnout = f [motivation, cost] Turnout decline due to higher costs in some states (NC, WI) But apparently lower Democratic motivation in others (e.g., OH) Ohio patterns provide window into what happened (Figure 8) Democratic collapse: Clinton fell to 43.6% from 51.5%/50.7% in 2008/2012. o Clinton < Obama in 2012 (and especially 2008) in 85/88 counties (not Delaware, Franklin and Warren) o Democratic collapse especially great in Appalachian counties (down 17% from 44% in 2012), rural/small town counties (down 12% from lower base of 36% in 2012) vs. only 5-6% in metropolitan counties Trump gains widespread, but less than Clinton losses o Trump > Romney 2012 in 82/88 counties (not Cuyahoga, Delaware, Franklin, Greene, Hamilton, Montgomery) o Clinton lost 1,000 votes more than Trump gained in 36/88 counties, often much more o Both dropped compared to 2012 in 4 counties (Cuyahoga, Greene, Hamilton, Montgomery) Undecided voters moved heavily to Trump in most battlegrounds (Figure 9) Unusually high % of undecideds in week before election day: 13% vs. 9% in 2012 Possible effect of Comey letters via priming may have been important there on eve of election 16

Figure 8 Democratic and Republican Presidential Votes in 88 Ohio Counties, 2016 vs 2012 Source: Official vote results, 11/30/16 17

Figure 9 Late Deciding Voters Favored Trump, 2016 Source: Exit Polls, 2016 18

Conclusion: Looking Beyond November 8 Still 50/50 nation: Clinton won popular vote by 2.5M; switch of 103K (MI, PA, WI) votes nationwide would have given her Electoral College win OH still battleground -- and bellwether ( canary in coal mine ) Full GOP control of government à accountability for policy Will Congress or White House drive agenda? Questionable mandate, but (as with Bush and Obama Admins) major policy changes likely Questions about post-election politics going forward Was 2016 one off or will it bring lasting realignment of party coalitions? Republican party: Whose party is it? o How much Congress-Executive conflict? o Can it keep white working class voters? Democratic party at lowest point since 1920s: Will it recover? Will Sanders movement challenge? What damage has been done to political system and legitimacy of elections? 19