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All during
the
2006
campaign,
our
Republican
candidates
for U.S.
Senate,
Congress and
local
offices knew
that they
were headed
for the
worst
election for
Republicans
since
Watergate.
With every
poll last
year, we
knew that
the Iraq war
was the
defining
issue of the
election.
As support
dropped for
the war, and
raised the
President’s
unfavorable
ratings, it
created a
catalyst for
Democrats to
win.
Certainly
there were
other
issues: a
broken
immigration
system; out
of control
spending and
corruption
in
Congress.
All of these
issues
defined a
failure by
the
Republican
majority in
Congress,
but none was
more
problematic
than the war
in Iraq.
Our November
7, 2006
national
post
election
survey of
1,000 voters
showed that
the damage
was
particularly
acute in the
Northeast
(New England
and Middle
Atlantic
States).
Just two
years ago on
the national
level, in
our 2004
post
election
poll,
affiliated
Republicans
outnumbered
Democrats 44
percent to
40 percent,
but in 2006
Democrats
outnumbered
Republicans
42 percent
to 39
percent. In
the
Northeast in
2004
Republicans
outnumbered
Democrats 44
percent to
39 percent,
but last
year
Democrats
now led
affiliated
Republicans
43 percent
to 40
percent. In
the lower
turnout of
the midterm
elections
two results
clearly
occurred.
First, a
significant
number of
Republicans
were so
disgusted
they did not
vote.
Second, some
voters who
in 2004
thought of
themselves
as
Republicans
had now left
the party.
The 2006
election was
a 5 to 4
vote against
the war.
Nationally,
voters
opposed the
war 52
percent to
45 percent.
Just two
years
before, the
country
supported
the war 53
percent to
44 percent.
Now it was
reversed by
16 points.
In the
Northeast it
was an even
more
distressing
turnaround.
In 2004 the
Northeast
voters
supported
the Iraq War
53 percent
to 45
percent. In
2006,
support for
the war
among
Northeast
voters
plummeted 12
points, to
41 percent,
while
opposition
rose 13
points to 58
percent -- a
25 point
turnaround.
With the
drop in
support for
the war,
also went
the
President’s
approval
ratings. In
direct
correlation
with public
opinion’s
support for
the war in
2004 voters
had approved
of the job
President
Bush was
doing 54
percent to
45 percent.
In the
Northeast in
2004 the
President’s
approval
rating was a
net positive
52 percent
to 46
percent.
By 2005 the
President’s
approval
rating
became a net
negative
nationally
46 percent
approved and
53 percent
disapproved.
In the
Northeast it
was 45
percent
approved and
54 percent
disapproved.
In the midst
of this
shift on
the
polarizing
issue of the
electorate,
there was
also a
direct
correlation
between the
voter’s
attitude
toward the
war and
their vote
for
Congress.
Among voters
who opposed
the war they
voted
Democratic
for Congress
83 percent
to 15
percent.
Those voters
who
supported
the war
voted
Republican
for Congress
79 percent
to 20
percent. So
if you knew
whether the
voter
supported or
opposed the
war you had
an 80
percent
chance that
you could
predict
their vote
for
Congress.
Nationally
while
Republicans
had split
their vote
virtually
evenly in
2004, last
year they
voted
Democratic
54 percent
to 45
percent -- a
national 8
point drop
for
Republicans.
However,
once again
it was more
pronounced
in the
Northeast.
In 2004,
Northeast
voters
preferred
Republicans
51 percent
to 44
percent.
Last year,
they chose
Democrats
for Congress
56 percent
to 43
percent.
This was a
19 point
overall
reversal
against the
Republicans,
which made
it the worst
region in
the nation
for the GOP.
When we
asked the
2006 voters:
“Regarding
your vote
for
Congress,
was it more
in support
of, or in
opposition
to the War
in Iraq? If
your vote
was based on
other
issues, just
say so.”
Only one in
four of all
voters, 22
percent
across the
nation, said
that their
vote was a
vote in
support of
the war.
Four in ten
voters, 42
percent,
described
their vote
as a vote
against the
war. One in
three
voters, 32
percent,
claimed they
decided
their vote
on other
issues. In
the
Northeast,
23 percent
voted to
support the
war, while
almost half
-- 48
percent --
said they
voted to
oppose the
war. Those
who said
their vote
was to
oppose the
war voted at
an eight to
one ratio
for the
Democrats --
88 percent
to 11
percent.
Outlook for
2008
The 2006
election is
history.
The war in
Iraq has
been the
dominant
issue in the
previous two
national
elections
and
certainly it
will be an
important
part of the
November
2008
election.
But
Republican
incumbents
did survive
the anti-war
tsunami.
In our work
for
incumbents
who faced
strong
Democratic
challengers
we found
that as we
defined our
candidate’s
incumbency
on a broader
agenda, they
were more
likely to
win.
Nationally,
those who
decided
their vote
on issues
other than
the war
voted
Republican
58 percent
to 40
percent.
Also,
whenever
possible, if
we could
counter
Democratic
attacks on
the war by
defining our
Democratic
opponents as
wrong on
that same
agenda, it
really
undermined
the
Democratic
attack on
the war.
Basically we
were
fighting
over a
narrow
middle
segment of
the
electorate
that was
heavily
independent
and had no
allegiance
to either
party. In
this year’s
polls we are
seeing the
same
opportunity,
with about 6
in 10
independents
undecided in
their
generic
choice for
Congress.
So what has
changed
about the
War in Iraq
as an issue?
America
might be
winning.
Americans
don’t like
war, but
what they
hate more is
losing a
war,
especially
at the
sacrifice of
precious
American
lives.
In 2004
President
Bush and the
Republican
won the
national
elections
precisely
because the
majority of
Americans
believed
that his
policies
against
terror, on
the war and
for the
post-9/11
economy had
been
successful.
However, by
2006 the
plurality of
Americans
thought we
were losing
the war. As
such, the
majority of
voters cast
their
ballots
against
losing.
The
difference
now is that
American
opinion
appears to
have shifted
to give the
President
enough time
to allow his
policies to
succeed.
This cross
pressures
the
Democratic
candidates
with a base
that was
overwhelmingly
anti-war and
currently
favors a
relatively
immediate
pullout.
The
Republican
base was
never really
anti-war,
they just
became
discouraged
by the time
and toll the
war was
taking. In
campaign
focus
groups,
liberal
Democrats
would say
that they
were opposed
to the war.
“We should
never have
invaded
Iraq,
period,”
some
stated.
“The
President
lied about
weapons of
mass
destructions
to get us
into Iraq,”
others
declared.
In contrast,
Republicans
did not
complain
about the
war itself.
Rather their
focus group
comments
would go
along the
line of
reasoning as
follows: “We
were right
to go into
Iraq, but we
should have
left by
now.”
Republicans
and
Independents
who
supported
the
President
and the war
were
disillusioned
that we
would “lose”
the war.
So what are
we seeing in
current
polls that
look at the
war as an
issue for
2008? Our
major
findings of
recent
surveys in
the
Northeast
generally
find the
following:
• The war
is part of
an election
agenda which
includes
energy
costs, the
economy,
health care,
terror,
immigration,
taxes and
spending.
As long as
the “surge”
succeeds and
eventually
Iraq becomes
stable, the
war will not
be the
Democratic
silver
bullet as it
may have
been in
2006.
• As
economic
concerns
rise, three
in four
voters still
think that
the country
is headed in
the wrong
direction,
but this
time
Democrats
and Congress
share the
blame with
Republicans.
• The
President
remains
largely
unfavorable,
but the
Republican
Party is in
the midst of
a great
volatile
nomination
battle that
will
redefine its
image and
its
coalition.
• As
unpopular as
the
President
may still
be, Hillary
Clinton is
not far
behind.
Nationally
four in ten
voters are
unfavorable
to her and
they are
polarized
along
partisan
lines. No
way is Mark
Penn,
Hillary’s
pollster
correct that
she will get
25 percent
of the
Republican
women vote.
Her
negatives
among
Republican
women are
about 80
percent --
even in the
Northeast.
Last
November
among
Northeast
voters, even
before the
campaign
started
Senator
Clinton had
a 41 percent
unfavorable
rating. For
every ad
that a
Democrat
attacks a
Republican
with, there
may be one
to put some
distance
between the
Democrat and
Senator
Clinton.
Senator
Clinton, as
the nominee
of her
party, will
be a
catalyst for
a better
Republican
turnout than
in 2006.
Also she
will be a
cause for
ticket-spitting
for
Congress.
Among those
voters who
may vote for
her, a
sizable
segment do
not want her
to rule with
unchecked
control of
government
and will
split their
ticket as
they did
with her
husband in
the ’94, ’96
and ’98
elections.
• If
Senator
Obama wins
the
nomination,
the
Democratic
Party will
have gone
even farther
to the left
and become
even more
anti-war.
This will
leave more
of the
middle and
independent
vote
available to
the
Republicans.
• The
majority of
voters in
the
Northeast
are now
giving the
“Democratic
majority in
Congress” a
net negative
job rating.
This holds
true among
independents
and even
among
Democratic
voters in
key swing
districts.
Along with
the
Democratic
majority,
Speaker
Nancy Pelosi
now has a
net
unfavorable
rating in
key
districts.
•
Democratic
efforts to
push a tax
increase on
middle-class
and upper
middle-class
economy are
undermining
the
Democrats
credibility
that they
are actually
cutting
taxes for
the middle
class.
• In key
districts,
the majority
of Northeast
voters
support a
gradual
withdrawal
of troops
from Iraq
and are
opposed to
an immediate
withdrawal
that leaves
an unstable
Iraq.
• Democrat
missteps
fueled by
New York
Governor
Spitzer’s
very
unpopular
proposal to
give illegal
aliens
drivers’
licenses and
the tacit
support by
Senator
Clinton gave
Northeast
Republicans
an important
wedge issue
to regain
lost ground
on security
as an issue.
• Last
November six
in ten
voters, 59
percent
preferred
“smaller
government
with fewer
services”,
over “larger
government
with many
services”,
28 percent.
In the
Northeast
the
plurality of
voters
preferred
smaller
government
48 percent
to 36
percent.
Fiscal
conservatism
will be an
important
opportunity
once again
for
Republicans.
• With the
retirement
of
incumbents
and the
opportunity
for new
challengers
the
Republican
Party once
again has
the
opportunity
to become
the party of
new ideas,
new faces
and change
precisely at
a time when
voters will
be looking
for
independence
and change
once more.
The 2006
election is
history and
we should
learn from
it. The
2008
election can
be an
election of
opportunity
rather than
an election
of decline.
The changes
are coming.
RF
John
McLaughlin
is the
CEO/Partner
of
McLaughlin &
Associates. |