If We Don't Turn Out Our Base, We Will Lose
by Chris Bowers, Tue Sep 19, 2006 at 07:54:22 AM EDT
- USA Today / Gallup (9/17): 51% D--42% R
- AP-Ipsos (9/13): 51% D--39% R
- Pew (9/10): 50% D--39% R
- ABC (9/7): 50% D--42% R
- Gallup (9/7): 53% D--41% R
- USA Today / Gallup (9/17): 48% D--48% R
- Zogby (9/14): 37% D--34% R
- Fox, (9/13): 41% D, 38% R
- AP-Ipsos (9/13): 53% D--39% R
- CNN (9/2): 53% D--43% R
However, I simply cannot imagine any way for Democrats to win this election if Republicans turn out at higher rates than Democrats, as the Gallup poll LV model must undoubtedly show them doing. If we hold a nine-point edge among registered voters, than we should also hold a nine-point advantage among likely voters. If we fail to do so, then we have utterly failed in our field operations, our message, and our media strategy. You cannot find a nine-point nation swing within Independents. According to 2004 turnout levels, that would require moving 17% of Independents out of the Republican column and into the Democratic column. According to 2006 turnout levels, where Independent turnout will probably be even lower, an even larger swing will probably be required.
Democrats must turn out in higher rates than Republicans in order for us to win this election. This is requires a media strategy that targets African-Americans, since African-Americans are the ultimate Democratic base demographic. This requires a Latino GOTV program that is not vaporware. This is going to require a field strategy that targets Democrats, not just trying to increase the vote. This requires candidates to actually say they are Democrats in their commercials. Above all else, this is going to require not ducking Iraq, since nothing is on the mind of voters, especially Democratic voters, more than Iraq. If we lose on November 7th, and wake up the next day with Republicans still in charge of both branches of Congress, it will be because we did not do a good enough job getting Democratic voters to the polls. We have made real gains in partisan self-identification over the past two years relative to Republicans (see here, here and here). If we end up getting beat in turnout anyway, as the Gallup and Fox polls suggest we will, then our leadership will have squandered the best chance to retake Congress in a generation because they simply failed to see their own base as a meaningful part of the overall campaign equation.
Tags: 2006 elections, Democrats, GOTV, polls, turnout (all tags)









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