The 2000 Presidential Election in Louisiana

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University of New Orleans ScholarWorks@UNO Survey Research Center Publications Survey Research Center (UNO Poll) 10-1-2000 The 2000 Presidential Election in Louisiana Susan E. Howell University of New Orleans Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uno.edu/src_pubs Part of the American Politics Commons Recommended Citation Howell, Susan E., "The 2000 Presidential Election in Louisiana" (2000). Survey Research Center Publications. Paper 18. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/src_pubs/18 This Report is brought to you for free and open access by the Survey Research Center (UNO Poll) at ScholarWorks@UNO. It has been accepted for inclusion in Survey Research Center Publications by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UNO. For more information, please contact scholarworks@uno.edu.

Page 1 of 4 The 2000 Presidential Election in Louisiana Press Release: October 26, 2000 The University of New Orleans Survey Research Center Phone: (504) 280-7379 Dr. Susan E. Howell, Director sehowell@uno.edu Research Assistants: Special thanks to the students in Dr. Rosenblum s Research Methods and Mr. Mazuca s American Government classes for their assistance in this survey. Matthew Vile Heidi Unter Monica Teets Manabu Saeki Overview The University of New Orleans Survey Research Center interviewed 658 registered voters by telephone between October 15 and 22. Results are reported for both the complete cross-section of registered voters and for the subset of likely voters, identified by the Gallup likely voter scale, which asks seven questions about voting habits. Regardless of whether you consider likely voters or all registered voters, George W. Bush enjoys a comfortable lead in Louisiana as of October 22. The margin is largely based on the 40% lead he has among white voters, who comprise over 70% of the electorate. Predictably, black voters overwhelmingly favor Al Gore. Presidential Preferences Among All Registered

Page 2 of 4 Registered All Black Bush 45% 60% 11% Gore 34 21 65 Buchanan 3 2 4 Nader 4 4 4 Undecided 14 13 16 N 658 456 183 Presidential Preferences Among Likely (using Gallup method) Likely All Black Bush 48% 62% 5% Gore 35 22 74 Buchanan 2 2 4 Nader 2 2 3 Undecided 13 12 14 N 461 337 110 Gallup s likely voter scale applied to Louisiana assumes 70% turnout among registered voters, as was the case in the 1996 presidential election. Presidential Preference Assuming Three Scenarios All election predictions are based on a series of what-ifs, so we have computed three scenarios, based on different assumptions about the undecided vote and turnout. The assumptions range from a pro-gore set of assumptions to a pro-bush set of assumptions. Any of the assumptions can be disputed, but the basic point is that, even in the most pro-gore scenario, Bush leads by three points. All scenarios represent opinions at the time the survey was taken. Scenario 1 assumes equal turnout between blacks and whites and allocates 90% of the entire black vote to Gore. undecided voters are allocated 50/50 between Gore and Bush. Scenario 2 assumes equal turnout between black and white registered voters and allocates 90% of the undecided black vote to Gore. undecided registered voters are allocated in the same proportions as the white decided voters.

Page 3 of 4 Scenario 3 assumes turnout based on the Gallup likely voter method and allocates 90% of the undecided black vote to Gore. undecided likely voters are allocated in the same proportions as the white decided voters. Scenario 1 All Registered Scenario 2 All Registered Scenario 3 Gallup Likely Bush 49% 53% 55% Gore 46 40 40 Buchanan 2 3 3 Nader 3 4 2 N 639 639 447 Presidential Preferences and Party Identification (likely voters only) Democrat Independent Republican Black Democrat Black Independent Bush 31% 58% 94% 3% Only 10 cases Gore 51 13 2 81 Buchanan 2 3 1 2 Nader 3 4 0 1 Undecided 13 22 3 12 N 120 74 122 89 A major part of Gore s problem in Louisiana is the defection to Bush of 31% of white Democrats. This contrasts to the national pattern of greater loyalty of Democrats to their candidate. The Gallup poll of U.S. likely voters October 18-20 showed 88% of Democrats supporting Gore. Within this survey we can identify three reasons for the white Democratic vote for Bush (see table below). One fourth of white Democratic likely voters either identify as conservatives, favor using the surplus for a tax cut, or disapprove of Clinton, any of which could incline them to vote Republican. The defection of 31% of white Democrats in Louisiana, in combination with Bush s four to one lead among white independents, has created a higher level of racial polarization in this state than existed in the past two presidential elections. In those contests white Democrats and white independents voted proportionately more Democratic than today.

Page 4 of 4 Conservative 28% Moderate 32% Liberal 10% Favoring Tax Cut 26% Favoring Deficit Reduction 63% National economy is Better 50% National economy is 11% Worse Disapprove of Clinton 25% Presidential Preferences and Demographics (likely voters only) Total N: registered voters likely voters % Black among registered voters: % Female among registered voters: Sampling Error, Total Sample: Sampling Error, Likely : 658 461 29 56 3.9% 4.6%