In the aftermath of the Colorado shooting we are sure to
hear from a variety of experts. Lawyers
and law professors will talk about upcoming hearing, arraignments and likely
trial to come. Doctors and mental health
workers will tell us about mental health issues (what’s the difference between
being a weirdo and being psychotic?) while aforementioned lawyers will talk
about the difficulties of successfully pleading not guilty by reason of
insanity. In short, experts will talk
about their fields to explain complex legal proceedings or how schizophrenia
develops to us laymen. So why can’t we
do the same with politics.
There’s a whole world of political science out there that is
almost completely ignored by the news media that tells us all sorts of
interesting things about how our political system works and how much of what
you and reporters believe to be iron clad truths about politics is totally
wrong. Here’s a quick true or false quiz
for you to take:
1. Independent voters are the most important part of the
electorate because they switch between supporting different parties in
different elections.
2. Identifying with a party won’t influence who you chose to
vote for very much.
3. Building public support for policies is one of the best ways
for a president to advance his agenda through Congress.
4. Public addresses such as the State of the Union or televised
address are one of the best ways to change public opinion making the “bully
pulpit” one of the most effective tools a president has at his disposal.
5. Presidents don’t try to keep their campaign promises very
much.
So how’d ya do?
Unless you answered false to every question not very well. Indeed a wealth of findings in political
science, some of which is empirically tested and goes back decades, tells us
that each one of these statements is just wrong. But I bet that most political pundits and
voters would agree with some, if not all, of them. Let’s go through them.
1. A whole host
of data out there tells us that while lots of the electorate, maybe over a third,
may identify with the label “independent” but most of those people actually
behave like partisans. That is they cast
their votes generally towards supporting one party over election cycles. And it makes sense, as someone who’s been personally
told “I’m an independent but I’d never vote for a Democrat” more than once, I
can attest to this.
2. Party identification
is one of the strongest influences on how people vote and political science literature
has proven this again and again. In
fact, it’s probably as big of an influence as demographic categories like
race. Thus, just as it’s easy to take a good
guess as to how a white heterosexual man with a high school education over the
age of 40 from rural Alabama or a Jewish mother of two with a graduate degree
and lives in White Plains will vote, it’s also easy to guess how someone who identifies
with a party will vote. News stories may
be full of people who are a lifelong _____ but are now voting for _____ because
_____, but these people are actually a tiny slice of American society.
3. Actually
this is false as well. Time and time
again Presidents have tried to get Congress to do things by building public pressure
and time and time they fail. Ronald
Reagan summed things up quite well:
Time and again, I would speak on television, to a joint session of Congress, or to other audiences about the problems in Central America, and I would hope that the outcome would be an outpouring of support from Americans…But the polls usually found that large numbers of Americans cared little or not at all about what happened in Central America…and, among those who did care, too few cared…to apply the kind of pressure I needed on Congress.
4. Just read above. The bully pulpit is in many ways a myth. Presidents can bring attention to issues with it, sort of, but they can’t necessarily do much more. Indeed the original advocate of the Bully Pulpit, Theodore Roosevelt, could speak out about unsanitary conditions in slaughterhouses but he couldn’t change them. That took legislation from Congress and the forming of the FDA and bureaucracies of meat inspectors much later.
5. This one is
my favorite. Ask this of a focus group
of voters and most folks will probably sagely nod their heads. But it’s also false, political science tells
us that Presidents at least try to keep their promises. Both Barack Obama and Bill Clinton campaigned
heavily on reforming health care and both spent a good deal of their first
terms trying to enact this policy change at great political expense. And those Bush tax cuts? They came into being as a way to counter
Steve Forbes’s call for a “flat tax” on the campaign trail and once Bush became
President they became law.
So there you have it, much of what you take for granted
about politics isn’t true at all. But
alas no one wants to do news segments on this even though it’s more interesting
that two people screaming at each other on air for 3 minutes. I think we should get some new experts on cable
news, but that’s just me.
No comments:
Post a Comment