Showing posts with label Biden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biden. Show all posts

Monday, October 5, 2020

TURNOUT TELL-ALL

The end of the pandemic is in sight. ~ Donald Trump (9/29/20)     

Here we are a mere 28 days before we choose whether the incumbent, possibly covid-filled president should remain in office or cast him out in favor of his eminently-laudable challenger.

But wait, a top-of-the ninth (or is it just the seventh inning stretch) colossal curve ball has been thrown into this political game, worthy of Sandy Koufax or Dwight Gooden. The curve ball is the Friday, October 2 announcement that #45 has covid-19. It’s highjacked the election, probably just as the president hoped. To no one’s surprise, his administration has itself become a super-spreader event.

Yup, viral reality has likely stricken our here-to-fore, ever-unmasked #45. I say likely because we should balance three concurrent realities. First, this virus’ months-long, utterly non-discriminatory and all-too-successful efforts to infect everyone; second, #45’s regular no-rules denials of fact, science and truth (see his quote above, QED); and third, #45’s on-going and widening deficit in election polls. Given this state of affairs, my amply well-founded, cynical self has pondered that he could be making up his infection for his own desperate advantage on November 3.

On Sunday, the seemingly non-stricken #45 briefly left his suite at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for a short, unannounced motorcade ride so he could wave to his supporters outside. The president’s un-sick behavior was properly labeled by doctors at Walter Reed as irresponsible “insanity.” It’s only insanity if he actually has covid-19. Imagine him triumphantly returning to the White House all too soon, saying he’s facilely “fired the virus.”  

Because of his nefarious approach to politics, I urge the Dems to walk a fine line and not to be too considerate about the president’s viral condition. If they are too thoughtful, as is their virtuous inclination, they could become hoodwinked toast. Remember not the Maine, but hopeful victory on the 3rd, please.

The Repubs haven’t stopped a single one of their negative ads against Mr. Biden, as the president waved to his fans in his SUV outside Walter Reed. The Dems have ceased theirs against #45. This befits a risky tactic of perhaps being overly empathetic of the president’s (alleged) medical malady. Joe, please restart your full court press and all your ads, now.

But back to the upcoming balloting for the presidency.

In this seemingly-interminable presidential election cycle, analysts have guesstimated that the number of “undecideds” may range from 3% to 11% of registered voters; most polls show 3% to 5% at most. For the life of me, I don’t know how our presidential choice this time can be at all puzzling; which is another way of saying that the media’s obsessive focus on allegedly “undecided” voters is a misplaced ruse. At this point, there aren’t any really “undecided” voters to speak of. But the giant media election apparatus really, really requires them for their stories as well as the debates. Remember the debates?  

The incentive for someone to say now they’re “undecided” rests solely on receiving a slender, Skinnerian pellet of spotlighted, momentary media attention. “You’re really undecided; that’s fabulous, can we please interview you?” The media’s spotlight is probably bright enough for a few people to apparently want to bath in it. To assist those very, very few remaining "undecided" voters, I suggest you take this handy quiz to learn what you should do on election day. 

Other analysts believe most of these very scarce “undecided” voters aren’t likely voters. Past information indicates all too many will not vote on November 3. From this perspective, there are mainly “undecided” non-voters.

Despite the intensity and importance of every US presidential election, vast swaths of eligible voters regularly decline their privilege. The US Elections Project has determined that 39.9% of our voting-eligible population, or 45.3% of our voting-age population, did not vote in November 2016. Our paltry election turnout-participation rate ranked the US 26th highest of the 35 listed, advanced democracies, just behind Estonia.[1] The hefty number of non-voting citizens is in part why election campaigns focus on improving turnout and “getting the vote out.”

The table below shows the voter turnout and related information for the 2018 primary and Congressional elections and the 2016 presidential election for several major voting groups. Voter turnout is the percentage of eligible voters who cast a ballot in an election. In 2016, the national average turnout of voting-age people was 59%. Minnesota had the highest voter turnout of any state in 2016 and 2018.

Voter Turnout and Electorate Shares by Ethnicity and Age

Group

Voter Turnout

2018      2016

Share of Electorate

2018      2016

Share of 2019 Pop.

Non-Hispanic White

55.2%    64.7%

73.3%    73.6%

60.1%

Hispanic

36.9       44.9

  9.4          9.1

18.5

Non-Hispanic Black

51.3       59.9

12.2        12.3

13.4

18-29 years old

32.6       43.4

13.8        15.7

16.4

60+ years old

65.5      71.4

37.3        33.6

16.5 (65+)

Sources: US Elections Project, US Census, Marketingcharts.com

As shown in the table, non-Hispanic White people and people 60 years old or over, aka elder voters, had the highest turnout, closely followed by non-Hispanic Black people, a key Dem constituency. Younger people, a hopeful Dem constituency, had the lowest turnout, half that of elder voters in 2018. These turnout rates are typical across many years’ elections. Elder voters account for a disproportionate share of the electorate, relative to their 2019 population share. The other groups’ population shares are more commensurate with their electorate shares.

Once again, the Dems are emphasizing increased turnout for young people and Hispanics, as well as non-Hispanic Black folks. If the Dems’ efforts succeed in improving these groups’ turnout it could likely benefit their candidates. But in past elections such efforts have largely come up short with regard to younger persons. Interestingly, California has a proposition on its ballot that would further expand youth voting privilege by allowing 17-year olds to vote in primaries and special elections if they will be 18 by the time of the next general election. OMG, say it ain’t so.

The Dems are also hoping to get Bernie Sanders’ and Elizabeth Warrens’ progressive believers to vote for Joe. Both Bernie and Elizabeth are thankfully far more engaged in promoting the Dems’ candidate than they were four years ago. The question remains whether Progs will really shed their puritanical mental frocks and actually cast a ballot for Biden, despite their believing he’s not “pure” enough. Fingers are crossed in hoping they are not all like Roger Williams, a strict Puritan leader, nearly 400 years ago.

The Dems’ challenges illustrate a long-running political dispute about election strategy: Is it better to persuade people who will likely support you to actually vote by increasing turnout or to win over swing voters and change the vote margin?

Both are important for achieving victory, but past elections indicate it is more valuable to win by changing the vote margin than by changing turnout. Why? Because successfully changing a persuadable voter to change her/his sides (change the vote margin) produces two votes: plus one for you, and minus one for your opponent. Getting an additional voter to cast a ballot through turnout is worth just one vote. Also, an election’s vote share/margin also tends to shift more than turnout from election to election. Thus, changing the margin ends up being more politically “efficient”, netting two votes versus one vote, but can entail more convincing efforts.

I’m trusting that despite #45’s relentless all tricks and no treats, the thoughts of #16’s Secretary of State William Seward (who bought Alaska for us at a pittance) remain true: “There was always just enough virtue in this republic to save it; sometimes none to spare, but still enough to meet the emergency.” In our current emergency we’ll find out soon if Sec. Seward was right, as I truly hope.

 



[1] For you national election geeks, Belgium has the highest voter turnout with 87.2% of the voting-age population actually casting votes in their latest national election.




 



Thursday, September 17, 2020

SHOULD I MOVE BACK TO PHILADELPHIA?

Venus favors the bold. ~ Ovid 

It seems to me that the fall election will be the day after tomorrow. The intensity of media’s circus about all things electoral is being ratcheted way up – with more than Barnum’s three (3) rings and a mere 46 days remaining before November 3.

A growing bask[1] of poll results are published daily. Incessant interviews with allegedly undecided voters pervade the media. Come on, how could any semi-cognizant person 18yrs or older remain unresolved about voting for either Biden or Trump? The number of “swing” or “battleground” states –where someone has decided the expected election results are “too close to call” – have multiplied this time around. Past elections have categorized three or four states as swingers, not now. Last week there were 12 to 15 states that have been labelled “swing/battleground” by various organizations.

Fifteen states, really? Absurdity lives on both sides of the screen. Either the polls’ always-suspect forecast accuracy is getting worse, or the cabal of pollsters and media have determined it’s decidedly inequitable that only a couple of states get so anointed. Each of the 15 swingers must deserve a participatory blue or red tinted ribbon.

According to one analyst, Pennsylvania will likely decide the presidential election among the swingers. Sorry Wisconsin, Minnesota, Ohio and Florida. Your time in the election spotlight’s glare has apparently dimmed. So, if the Keystone State is indeed the key state, should I move back there – I grew up in suburban Philadelphia – and vote to help Joe win? Is my additional vote worth more there than in the People’s Republic of Berkeley, where I’ve resided for decades?

To see if I can still actually legally cast a vote in Pennsylvania I visited the comprehensive www.vote2020-womentowomen.com/ website that Patrice and her friend Linda Saulsby recently launched. I learned I need to relocate in PA no later than October 2 and register by October 19. It would be a rather quick hop, skip and a long jump back to Liberty Bell-land. Recent polls of likely voters in PA show Biden leading #45 by 3% to 7%, indicating that more Biden voters will help.

Each and every vote counts of course, and in the last presidential election Sec. Clinton beat The Donald by a significant 30.0% margin in my home state, California. In Alameda County, where Berkeley dwells, her victory margin was an incredible 63.6%. She received 5.4 votes for every vote Trump got. These results illuminate California’s and my home county’s status as deeply midnight blue territory. The most recent polls of likely voters in CA show Biden leading from 29% to 30%.

On the other hand, #45 won Pennsylvania in 2016 by a miniscule but vital 0.7% margin even though the state has been Democratically-aligned for a long time. The Dems’ presidential candidates have won PA in 10 of the 17 elections since 1952. Before 2016, the Dems triumphed the last six straight presidential elections. But now politicos believe PA is getting redder. As Democrat cognoscente James Carville stated, “Between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is just Alabama.”

I cast my first presidential vote in November 1968 for Hubert Humphrey when I lived in Montgomery County, one of Philadelphia’s four “collar counties” that surround it. In 2016, Montgomery County gave Sec. Clinton a 21.3% winning margin.

In order for Biden to win PA this time around, these four collar counties (and Pittsburgh’s Dem majority) must surmount #45’s strength throughout the far less urban rest of the state. That, unfortunately, did not happen in 2016. It most assuredly needs to happen this November 3.

In his disastrous town hall meeting held in Philadelphia this week, #45 talked about “herd mentality” – yet another of his ever-lengthening list of spoken misnomers – when he likely meant herd immunity. Actually, from this I believe he and his deceitful campaign has been exposed for using heard mentality to inure his base from the real world and instead accept his fearfully-spoken dark fantasies.

I haven’t booked a flight to PHL yet. I’m hoping Joe and Kamala will continue bolstering their fearlessly bold and clear advantages to the voting public. They should keep emphasizing their positivism, humanity, knowledge, credibility, common sense and perhaps most importantly, empathy for every US resident.

I also haven’t scheduled a journey to our closest planetary neighbor, Venus. I found the report that astrobiologists may have discovered phosphine (PH3) in Venus’ atmosphere emotionally-positive news. On Earth, phosphine can be produced either by microbes or chemists (including as a lethal by-product of hazardously-operated meth labs).

That’s right, possibly some beyond-strange microbial lifeform could be floating next-door in the Venetian atmosphere. Wow; welcome to the planetary neighborhood. Unfortunately there’s no beaches to travel to (it’s a toasty 900°F on the surface), but what an escape from the onslaught of a covid-flu twindemic, wildfires, the on-going viral recession and vicious politics.

To Venus and beyond…

 



[1] A bask is the collective noun that describes a group of crocodiles, a treacherous reptilian carnivore.