Political Hotsheet
October 5, 2010 9:10 AM

Is the Democratic Comeback Real?


This post originally appeared on Slate.


President Obama

(Credit: Getty Images)
Fox News alerts regularly herald the latest tsunami warnings, and the one today was for Okinawa, Japan. (Thankfully, nothing came of it.) I've gotten so many of these false alarms that each new warning now seems like assurance that there's nothing to worry about. Democrats would like that analogy to describe this election year: Fox-fomented media hype about a big wave that never comes.

For the last several weeks, various Democrats have been arguing that their efforts to motivate their voters have been paying off. A slow-to-stir president is finally making a case about the dangers of Republican control of Congress. Polls are improving both nationally and in specific races. Today, Democrats announced that they'd raised $16 million this last quarter, their best haul in years.

But what does it all mean? First, don't put away the foul-weather gear. There will be a wave. Republicans will pick up seats in the House and Senate. What's at issue is the size of the swell (or amplitude, if you've been thinking of the wave in mathematical terms). It has gotten smaller. Even Republicans admit this. This was expected. The question is whether Democrats are "coming home" in a way that will continue, reducing losses far more than expected.

At this stage of a campaign, the losing side always comes up with an exciting theory. (In 2008, the McCain campaign had one.) Its purpose is psychological as well as tactical. People don't like to lose, and look for hope in the smallest signs, such as the number of bumper stickers in a parking lot. And politics is unpredictable enough--and this year has been plenty crazy--that they have grounds for their hope. Plus, pundits and political strategists are often wrong.

Even if Democrats know how bad things are, there's a tactical reason to pretend a rally is on. It's a conjuring trick. It might actually energize everyone to rally for the team. That's why various partisan columnists, strategists, and hope-mongers have heralded President Obama's return to the campaign mode every week for the last several months. Today, White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer highlighted the president's recent speech at the University of Wisconsin. "We have seen, I think--that we are beginning to make up the enthusiasm gap," Pfeiffer said on a conference call with reporters. "We are making progress every day."

Critical Contests: Interactive Map with CBS News' Race Ratings

There is actual evidence to back up the hope. National polls have all been trending back towards Democrats. When voters were asked whether they would vote for a Democrat or a Republican, the GOP had a steady lead over the last two months in an average of the polls. Now the two parties are almost tied. The Gallup poll shows the same narrowing, as does the Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll. Democrats usually discount Rasmussen polls as biased for the GOP, but even Rasmussen shows a nine-point Democratic surge. "There is life left in this baby," says Simon Rosenberg of the New Democratic Network, who has been arguing the case for a reappraisal of the election for weeks.

Democrats also see their ground game paying off. In Ohio, organizers point to a recent CBS News/New York Times poll. By two-to-one, more respondents said they had been contacted by a Democratic Party volunteer than by a Republican one. Because the Obama ground game has been in operation for three years, in many cases these contacts are from familiar voices--a key in turning a contact into an actual vote.

This ground game helps explain why Gov. Ted Strickland, a Democrat, is now tied with his opponent in recent polls, Republican John Kasich. (Polls had shown a double-digit margin.) The power of the base was also demonstrated in the party's fundraising totals. As the Hotline pointed out, $16 million is the DNC's largest month since 2002.

What accounts for the movement? Strategists offer a lot of theories. Unenthusiastic Democrats are finally paying attention and deciding to vote. Ads marking a clear contrast between candidates are sinking in, and so is the president's message about this election being about a "choice" between two parties instead of an up-or-down vote on the Democratic agenda. There is no single, compelling GOP leader, and what people know about those leaders that do exist, they don't like. In a recent National Journal/Pew Research Center poll, 60 percent said they disapproved of GOP leaders. (Fifty-three percent had the same view of Democrats.).The GOP message--we're not Obama--has penetrated all whom it will. In sum: The Republicans peaked too early.

Now that Congress has gone home, it can't help but improve the situation for Democrats. The public does not like Congress or its leaders. There's no more chance for them to bicker on television about stalled legislation and who is to blame for it.

But now for a reality check: How much does all of this good news get the Democrats? About 10 seats, says one longtime Democratic strategist involved in the races. Which is to say, they may lose 10 fewer seats than they expected. The math still looks bad for Democrats. The economy is still terrible, and people are still extremely glum about the country's future. That bad atmosphere, plus Democrats defending seats in historically Republican territory, plus Obama's low approval rating, means more than 20 or so seats currently held by Democrats are all but certain to go to Republicans. This tracks with the lowest possible prediction of GOP gains among political scientists who have made a study of making this guess. (The highest guess in the group of political scientists was a 51 seat gain by Republicans.)

After those certain victories, Republicans need 19 seats to take control of the House. If Democrats win a few GOP-held seats, maybe that number increases to 25. There are 40 to 50 Democrat-held seats, from which Republicans could take that number. The GOP doesn't have to run the table. It just has to win about half the available seats. Nate Silver puts that probability at 67 percent, based on historical trends.

There are two pieces of data that may temper Democratic hopes. The first is that independents have been breaking away from the president and Democrats. How much stock you put in this group depends on how many actual moderates and independents you think there are. If you're a Democrat and you think a lot of so-called moderates and independents lean Democratic, then you think they're yours to get. If not, you believe that they're gone, that it's too late to convince them, and that it's going to be a bad year. Third Way, a centrist Democratic group says that turning out the Democratic base won't be enough to avoid a bad wave (PDF).

But for Democrats, the biggest bucket of cold water comes from looking at voters most likely to vote. In that group, the GOP has a big advantage that can't be dented by the Democratic Party's superior turnout model. With the election less than a month away, Gallup has now refined its methodology: Instead of looking at "registered voters," where Democrats and Republicans are roughly even, it looks at "likely voters." Among that group, and under two different turnout scenarios, Democrats are down by 12 percentage points. Gallup's final likely-voter model has been historically accurate. If it is this year again, then a huge splash of water is heading straight for the Democrats.

More from Slate:

The right's favorite scare word is "elitism." What does it mean?
Is it so offensive to note the effectiveness of the Jewish lobby??
How the Roberts Court disguises its conservatism


John Dickerson is a CBS News political analyst. He is also Slate's chief political correspondent and author of On Her Trail. You can also follow him on Twitter here.

Tags:
Obama ,
Democrats ,
Election 2010
Topics:
Campaign 2010 ,
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Add a Comment See all 48 Comments
by lumos1 October 5, 2010 12:00 PM EDT
by patocc123 October 5, 2010 11:48 AM EDT "If everyone were required to pay taxes we would be in such debt." ======================================================================== Hmmmmmmm...........only the total delusional teahaddists would ever expect to tax those living below the poverty line, and expect to make any difference besides lowering the American standards even further! The republicons only want to continue their WAR on the middle class by offshoring more "liveable wage" jobs and tax those that have the least, while allowing millionaires and billionaires to get tax breaks!
Reply to this comment
by mgeg1 October 5, 2010 11:59 AM EDT
Is anyone else sick of the governing of the United States being treated as if it were a game? Who's winning and who's losing? What team is rallying? What error is costing their team the game?
Reply to this comment
by Chapeltepec October 5, 2010 11:56 AM EDT
CBS! You are drinking the White House Koolaid! Keep thinking the Dems are seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. It is the headlight of the oncoming train! Just remember, Katie and Company, you heard it here!
Reply to this comment
by lumos1 October 5, 2010 11:55 AM EDT
by jwilwade October 5, 2010 11:45 AM EDT-------------- "Unions are the same as a big business" ======================================================================== Hmmmmmmm.........since unions only consist of a mere 8% of ALL American workers today, trying to compare union 527's to the huge and DEEP POCKETS of corporate America (Exxon annual PROFITS have been running up to $40 Billion) is just an exercise in delusions and insanity, but this is something we've all come to expect from far-right teahaddists that get all their nooz from the fox political network of rabid propagandists!
Reply to this comment
by retm-w October 5, 2010 12:01 PM EDT
Right check out the afl cio, seiu, uaw, teamsters coffers. And they take union dues money to donate to the far left dems, without ant input from their members. To bad they don't wake up and figure out the dems are playing them for suckers. The dems don't care about the working class any more then the republicans do.
by mgeg1 October 5, 2010 12:05 PM EDT
retm-w, that was one of the most honest posts I have seen from you.
by palmflood October 5, 2010 11:54 AM EDT
The week after the elections, Obama visits India. He can propel himself above the fray and propel the nation forward by making a joint statement with the Indian PM about space-based solar power. Baseload energy to cities, forward bases, rural areas, disaster zones, and electric transportation, led by two largest democracies. Energy 24/7, no clouds, 5GW per sat, scalable over the course of the century. He can channel JFK's moon program announcement in this way, only this is a much larger use of the moon.
Reply to this comment
by kevjustice October 5, 2010 11:46 AM EDT
IF EVERYONE WERE REQUIRED TO VOTE(LIKE IN AUSTRALIA) DEMS WOULD WIN.
Reply to this comment
by patocc123 October 5, 2010 11:48 AM EDT
If everyone were required to pay taxes we would be in such debt.
by ConstantineXIII October 5, 2010 11:51 AM EDT
Please. There is no poll that shows this.
by BaselessCritique October 5, 2010 11:46 AM EDT
Vote Republican and you vote to kill the middle class! Just take the auto industry rescue. If the right had had their way. Every auto-industry job in America (not just GM and Crysler) would be gone -- Millions of jobs. It's very simple: without GM and Chrysler, the materials and parts industry collapses; without the materials and parts industry, Toyota and all the other foreign auto makers here go bye-bye too. And with all of that goes the heart of the working middle class. Now who was it that wanted to destroy the auto industry and the middle class? Who called that socialism? The fact is that the right would do anything to kill the UAW, even if it means destrying the middle class in the process.
Reply to this comment
by lumos1 October 5, 2010 11:37 AM EDT
Compare karl rove's PAC funding of 91% by texass billionaires to 80% of the Dem funding by over 250,000 patriotic Americans donating less than $200.
Reply to this comment
by pubsrtoast October 5, 2010 11:39 AM EDT
How inconvenient for those Texass billionaires that it is still one person, one vote.
by jwilwade October 5, 2010 11:45 AM EDT
Obma received more from big Business than any candidate ever! Hypocrite. Plus Unions are the same as a big business Hypocrite! They are the largest special interest of all hypocrite.The people that own business are real Americans that actually provide jobs to your UNION thugs that destroy America Hypocrite! So yes I would compare the people that make America to the people that live off the people that make America any day of the week. The blue collar good men and woman that work for the corrupted unions that are forced to join and then robbed by the corrupted Unions are stock holders as well so they are also part of the BIG BUSINESS as they to are OWNERS of it. Hypocrite.
by msimamaji October 5, 2010 11:36 AM EDT
As a wanna be Wall Street gamester, I want to give a big shout-out to the GOP. Hey they want to eliminate the minimum wage law and get tax breaks for off-shoring American jobs. There's a pink slip in everyone's future and I'm just lovin' it. After all, the less corporations pay their employees, the higher my dividend check. The GOP wants to get rid of all sorts of pesky federal government regulations, like OSHA, EPA, and the CPSA. That't great because safety and environmental regulations cost money and that reduces my dividend income. Of course, there's a human price. Coal mines blow up. People get killed in workplace accidents. Agri-businesses, Oil, coal and natural gas companies dump all sorts of toxic substances in the air and water supplies. Kids get all sorts of illnesses ranging from asthma to cancer, some of these kids die. But who cares about the stupid trailer trash when I can make millions? Besides, the angry white man is voting Republican any way. And he'll even be angrier when his boss off-shores and when his insurance company drops his health insurance coverage and he has to pay for his kids' asthma medicine out of his own pocket. So it looks like the GOP will build a power base that will last 1,000 years. So right on, GOP. I'm getting millions without paying taxes for it and every one on Main Street is getting the shaft. That's just the way I like it.
Reply to this comment
by patocc123 October 5, 2010 11:44 AM EDT
Ahh fear mongering. Nice to see you and the GOP have alot in common.
by smitvict October 5, 2010 11:55 AM EDT
Gee, let's look at Obama. Obama wants a minimum wage so high that you can raise a family of four - in comfort - and of course employers will just hire MORE! Obama wants a job in everyone's future - a GOVERNMENT job. Obama wants so many "useful" regulations, like cap and tax, which, of course, won't drive up prices for middle class Americans not one cent (and the stimulus will keep unemployment below 8% too). Obama is putting in so many workplace rules and regulations, business cannot complete in the U.S. and has to send jobs overseas so the American middle class can afford to buy their products. Not costing one American job, of course. Did I mention Obama's energy policy, cap and tax, where prices are raised so high for the American middle class we'll be using wood from the back yard to cook our meals (which by the way will lead to even greater air pollution)? Of course, Obama is supported by the angry black man who wants it all for free - from the government. They'll vote for him regardless. So, since the GOP is out of power and we are enjoying the results of Obama's "change", let's celebrate by having lasts year and this year be the first and second highest deficits on record! Celebrate! That's just the way I like it.
by loginos October 5, 2010 11:35 AM EDT
Hmmm, could Dodd, Frank and the Democrat congress be culpable for the financial collapse?
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