What Landslide? A Closer Look at the Midterm Election Results
Sunday 21 November 2010
by: John Kane, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis
By now, everyone has heard of the conservative "tidal wave" that has overtaken Congress and most gubernatorial seats throughout the U.S. Indeed, anyone who has watched mainstream media coverage probably understands the midterm election results as a "rebuke of Obama's policies," with the "Tea Party movement" captivating "The American People" and putting the brakes on the Democrats' irresponsible, big-government agenda.
That's the prevailing narrative, at least. And, surprisingly, this version of events has been accepted all across the spectrum. Even figures like Michael Moore, speaking with a group of analysts on Democracy Now!, have made arguments for why the Democrats were defeated so badly (Obama and the Democrats were too conciliatory, too timid, etcetera) and offered arguments for what must be done going forward (fewer concessions to Wall Street and the rich, etcetera).[1] But in doing so, those who make such arguments implicitly accept the "Conservative/Tea Party/anti-Progressive landslide" narrative.
I would strongly suggest that, while the election results are certainly a political setback for Democrats, this "Tea Party triumph" interpretation is wildly misleading once we look more closely at the actual election results. The media loves conflicts and narratives and, as Mark Weisbrot of the Center for Economic and Policy Research aptly predicted back in September, this election season was practically preordained to be the election where everyone finally acknowledges that the Obama administration and Democrats lost "because they tried to go too far, too fast, and too left for the inherently conservative American masses."[2]
True, if we look at the change in the composition of Congress, we see that Democrats have lost at least sixty seats (with several races still to be decided) thereby forfeiting control of the House of Representatives. In the Senate, Democrats have lost at least six seats, now wielding only a narrow majority instead of their former "filibuster-proof" sixty or more seats. We've also seen a large shift in the gubernatorial races: though several races are still undecided, Democrats have lost at least nine governorships, now holding only sixteen out of fifty. So how can we possibly not understand this as a "clear" vote by "The American People" that the progressive agenda must be stopped?
I will offer four crucial points as to why evaluating the election in this manner is grossly inaccurate. It must be understood that referring to a substantial change in institutional power relations between the two parties as a substantial change in the mood of "The American People" is political sleight of hand at its worst. However, my position should not be interpreted as a defense of the Democratic Party, but rather as a condemnation of nonsensical media "analysis."
1. The Total Popular Vote
If asked whether it matters that Candidate A won an election over Candidate B by a margin of 3 percent versus, say, 60 percent, we would likely answer in the affirmative: although Candidate A is the "clear" victor in either case, there exists a serious qualitative difference between these two scenarios. And if we are trying to responsibly discuss the will of the electorate, it behooves us to look beyond the end result - i.e., Candidate A winning office. We would have to ask, for example, "How much did s/he win by? To what extent can we call Candidate A's victory a rejection of Candidate B's policies? To what extent can we generalize about the electorate as a whole?" These questions all require us to, at the very least, look at the popular vote rather than at who won the election.
Readers might be thinking that this reasoning is fairly straightforward, perhaps even tediously elementary. But apparently the mainstream media, Republicans and even Democrats disagree. President Obama referred to the Democratic losses as a "shellacking," [3] and Republican Senator Mitch McConnell said the elections amounted to an "F" on the Democrats' political report card, an evaluation swiftly and decisively handed to them by none other than "The American People." [4]
But what happens when we actually look at the total popular vote for all US Senate, gubernatorial and House of Representatives races? When we look at the total popular vote (that is, all national and gubernatorial votes for all Democrats and Republicans combined), Democrats are, unsurprisingly, still the losers overall - just as Candidate B was in both of my previous hypothetical scenarios - but the results are at serious odds with the prevailing media narrative.
I've calculated the Democratic and Republican averages in all available Senate, Governor and House race results. In the Senate, Democrats took 43.2 percent of the vote; Republicans took 51.5 percent. In the gubernatorial races, Democrats took 43.2 percent; Republicans took 50.5 percent. And finally, in the House -where Democrats suffered headline-grabbing losses - Democrats took 47.3 percent; Republicans took 50.1 percent. Yes, in the House of Representatives, where the media has been screaming about a Tea Party-led "bloodbath," Democrats lost the popular vote by less than three percent! In looking at these popular vote results, we clearly see that the Tea Party-Republican alliance barely captured a majority of the vote. The supposed "bloodbath," therefore, only represents a large change in the party composition of Congress, not an easily discernable shift in the qualitative (that is, ideological) composition of the electorate.[5]
But wasn't this past election really a rebuke of Obama's policies? We all remember how popular he was when he won by a landslide in the election in 2008, capturing the Electoral College by the enormous margin of 365 to 173. Doesn't this shift at least reflect a huge defeat for him personally?
Yes and no. A portion of the electorate, whether consciously or not, will have effectively made it harder for President Obama and the Democrats come January, 2011. If the past is any indicator, gridlock will be the name of the game for the next two years and, to the extent that this ultimately damages President Obama's political capital, yes, it was a rebuke. However, we shouldn't so readily accept the narrative that Obama came into office with overwhelming support. Though the Electoral College margin was enormous - just as the net gain of Republican House seats this year was enormous - he actually won with 53 percent of the popular vote; a mere 7 percent over John McCain.[6] A decisive victory, yes, but it was hardly a "mandate" by "The American People" to enact a "progressive agenda." Consider this last point along with the fact that in none of the national and gubernatorial midterm elections did Republicans, as a whole, win by more than 9 percent over their Democratic challengers. If there was a decisive "sea change" amongst the electorate over the past two years, it has not been borne out by the facts. The only thing "clear" about the midterm elections is that the media and its "analysts" are terrible at accurately reporting on them.
2. Voter Turnout
When I refer to the supposed change in the composition of the electorate, I do so because the electorate comprises those who actually voted on Election Day, not "The American People" as a whole. According to the United States Elections Project, the estimated turnout among eligible voters for the elections was 41.5 percent.[7] When factoring in those adult Americans who cannot vote, but who are nevertheless affected by legislation and policymaking and presumably hold political opinions, the turnout rate drops to 38.2 percent. And, to add one more layer of complexity, those figures simply represent voters who went to the polls - whether they voted for one, all, or some of the candidates on the ballot is not explicitly clear. In other words, the actual percentage of people who voted for any given race could conceivably be lower than 38.2 percent. Thus, when hearing politicians and pundits proclaim that "The American People" have clearly spoken, one should be thoroughly perplexed. In the best-case scenario, among all Americans of voting age, only 38.2 percent "spoke" on Election Day [8] and, as argued above, their message was anything but clear.
If the midterm elections could be roughly conceived of as ultimately representing a vote between those who saw the elections as important enough to merit casting a vote versus those who did not feel it was important/meaningful/useful enough to participate, then it truly was a "shellacking" - by a margin of roughly 20 percentage points - in favor of the latter. Looking at this meager turnout and making generalizations about "The American People" is, therefore, woefully misleading.
3. The Narrative Eclipses Third-Party Impact
In a few key races, the "Tea Party—Rise-of-the-Republicans" narrative rendered an image of third-party candidates as being of no consequence. If we only look for the winner of the vote, it becomes easy to miss the fact that more voters may have voted against a candidate than for him or her. For instance, in the Senate race in Illinois (for the seat formerly held by Barack Obama), none of the coverage I witnessed mentioned that the considerable turnout for Green Party candidate LeAlan Jones, who took 3.2 percent of the vote, could arguably have cost the Democrat Alexi Giannoulias (who lost by less than 2 percent [9]) the election. This observation is not an attack on the Green Party candidate, but a criticism of the media's inability to treat the victory of Tea Party favorite Mark Kirk as something more complicated than a shining example of the "clear" pushback against progressive politics nationwide.
Similarly, in Florida's Senate race, the moderate and Democratic vote was split between Independent Charlie Crist and Democrat Kendrick Meek. Together their votes amount to 49.8 percent, whereas Tea Party hero Marco Rubio won with 48.9 percent.[10] In Alaska, a write-in candidate headed toward victory over Tea Party darling Joe Miller. Adding to this more nuanced depiction of public opinion around the Tea Party are the losses of now-well-known, far-right candidates (many of whom were explicitly endorsed by the Tea Party) such as O'Donnell in Delaware, Paladino in New York, Angle in Nevada, Whitman and Fiorina in California, and McMahon in Connecticut. And yet, the narrative lives on.
4. Ideological Rejection vs. Managerial Rejection
Lastly, it's probably useful to question whether this was really an election about ideological preference and not simply a fall in many voters' confidence about the "handling of the economy" by the Democrats. It comes as no surprise that the number-one issue for nearly 90 percent of likely voters this year was the economy and jobs.[11] Given the weak health of the economy, it is also not surprising that a portion of the electorate might employ a kind of "guess-and-check" strategy where, if one political party does not appear to be improving the economy, some voters will simply "give the other one a try" for a while. These voters, then, desire more of a change in management than a change in ideological direction.
This point deserves more analysis than is possible to provide here, but in short, the perception that higher deficits are somehow causing the poor health of the economy is probably fairly pervasive among the general public. In reality, higher deficits are more the result of a weak economy - both in terms of decreased revenues, increased demand for government benefits (unemployment insurance, Medicaid, Food Stamps, etcetera), and the political necessity of stimulating (or at least maintaining) aggregate demand. One can see how some voters, lacking a clear understanding of this reality, might easily misread the causality and opt for new "managers of the economy."[12] Had unemployment been half of what it is currently, had more people been able to keep their homes, had more uninsured Americans been able to obtain affordable health insurance before the end of 2010, had more working class people been able to see what a real economic "stimulus" program could do to improve their lives - had all of this happened, my guess is that the election results would have been markedly different. And if that is indeed the case, the midterms cannot seriously be treated as a decisive endorsement by "The American People" of free-market economics and limited government, regardless of the extent to which others may want you to believe it.
1. http://www.democracynow.org/2010/11/3/exclusive_filmmaker_michael_moore_on_midterm
2. http://www.truth-out.org/mark-weisbrot-right-wing-upsurge-us-less-than-meets-eye63505
3. http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-11-04/obama-says-midterm-shellacking-to-spur-cooperation.html
4. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/us-politics/8111199/Midterms-2010-Mitch-McConnell-says-Americans-scored-Obama-with-an-F.html
5. I calculated these percentages using all available http://elections.nytimes.com/2010/results/house/big-board; and, http://elections.nytimes.com/2010/results/governor/big-board">election data from The New York Times. The calculations are based on the available results of 423 House races, 37 gubernatorial races, and 36 Senate races between Democrats and Republicans as of 11/4/10. In a dozen or so House races, percentages were listed for only one of the two parties. In these few cases, I subtracted the percentage from one hundred and gave the other party the difference. While this represents somewhat of an assumption on my part, it is not an unreasonable assumption and will have had only a small effect on the final party averages.
6. http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/results/president/
7. http://elections.gmu.edu/Turnout_2010G.html
8. Ibid
9. http://elections.nytimes.com/2010/results/illinois
10. http://elections.nytimes.com/2010/results/florida
11. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/mood_of_america/importance_of_issues
12. I've always been perplexed by this popular notion that the government can be badly "managing the economy" in some way, especially when coming from the same people who tout the virtues of our "free market" system. If these people were coherent free-marketeers, they would never claim that the government has any responsibility to "fix the economy" (except, perhaps, vis-a-vis lowering taxes).

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Comments
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And by now, the right wing
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 13:47 — Anonymous (not verified)And by now, the right wing billionaires have no doubt examined hedging their bets by fixing the election results. Seeing as no touchscreen voting systems are tamper proof, are the opposite of transparent and are installed in nearly every jurisdiction across the country, election theft could very well have taken place nearly anywhere. Which of course makes the false narrative discussed in this article even more false and amounting to nothing more than the cover story.
NO, an Obamanibly untimely
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 15:42 — Vic Anderson (not verified)NO, an Obamanibly untimely bridge Too SHORT, and NOT Left enough! Check, PLEASE?! INDEED!!!
The date of this article is
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 15:49 — Dwight Bobson (not verified)The date of this article is Saturday, 21 November 2009. What's up with that? How far in the future does John Kane live?
I noticed that too Dwight.
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 16:31 — Court (not verified)I noticed that too Dwight. Someone needs to fix that.
Wow. The DLC must pay you
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 17:19 — Anonymous (not verified)Wow. The DLC must pay you well for spin doctoring.
The democrats never had
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 17:33 — Anonymous (not verified)The democrats never had "filibuster-proof" or 60 votes. They were acting like different parties. Too many factions under the same banner. Too many republicans camouflaged. On the article itself, sorry to say I was lost with it verboseness. So many redundant paragraphs.
I hate to be that guy but
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 18:02 — William Davis (not verified)I hate to be that guy but Glen Greenwald has been saying this since election night
It should be noted that 47%
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 19:13 — Anonymous (not verified)It should be noted that 47% of the electorate (those voting) in 2008 were not too goddam brilliant, given what occurred over the previous 8 years. I was absolutely stunned that such a high percentage would vote for a flip-flopping power-hungry flag-waving Neo Nazi plus another semi-literate jingoistic twit as sidekick.
The more pathetic figure is that the "electorate"
is less than half of the voting age population, so we frankly don't know how many of them are retarded as well, but we do know they are (a)pathetic. Heaven help us...
Yes, the biggest problem is
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 19:30 — Anonymous (not verified)Yes, the biggest problem is the lack of eligible voters voting. Perhaps it would be helpful to assess what is behind that. By the way, I was surprised to read that we were down to 50 states - did the others secede? :-)
Getting real about
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 19:57 — Anonarcmous (not verified)Getting real about future:'Palin:2012' and "repeal the bill[healthcare]' stickers are here!Keep busy and keep moving to educate people--these are matters of life and death--Oh, and I noticed this guy's stickers on !] an import vehicle and 2]is of Medicare age--quite content w/ government-healthcare. He and anyone else can always buy more healthcare if t/he/y wants to!
If the senate now, before
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 20:03 — Anonymous (not verified)If the senate now, before the replaced senators posts are taken, is veto or filibuster proof, why were the republicans able to stop so many of the houses bills, so many of the adminsitrations appointees and so forth. In fact the senate was not veto proof. If it were how could Senator McCain stop DADT repeal?
Why Vote At All? The Dems
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 20:08 — Christopher Marlowe (not verified)Why Vote At All? The Dems have supposedly had the Congress since 2006, but we still have these wasteful, foolish, illegal wars. Obama has expanded the Af-Pak war, and now we bomb civilians from predator drones. Obama's "Justice" Department took the Bush side suits over habeas corpus, illegal wire-tapping, and torture. Instead of a single payer system that the majority of Americans wanted, the health care bill was an unconstitutional hand out to insurance companies. Why should I bother voting for war-mongering, israel-kowtowing, corporate democrats? Being "not as bad a Republicans" just doesn't cut it.
This election reminded me of
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 20:16 — Anonymous (not verified)This election reminded me of Reagan's death. The coverage was all determined before the event. Those who control the messaging wanted a "tidal wave" to exist (no matter the reality) and so one was created.
A HUGE BIG DEAL was made out of anything that fit the script. Of course, they did all they could to make the ending as real as possible... of course they lied, spun, and yelled and screamed until some people actually did vote they way they wanted (and against their own best interest). But it seems to me that the dominant goals were to gain seats AND as importantly to make it seem like a big, fat slap at Obama's face. They really are manufacturing reality and they can't do it without weak-assed reporters, of which there seems to be no shortage.
It's all about the media. This article is the always-after-the-fact analysis that shows how everything wasn't and isn't as it seems. We need articles like this, for our own sanity, but it isn't like the teevee hosts are going to go with this one.
And the fact that most people simply don't vote is a looooong story and a tragic one. The effects of people not voting, for whatever reason, or of their votes not counting, for various reasons, can't be overestimated.
To live in a true democracy!!!! What a wonderful dream!
This article is just so
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 20:29 — keep_it_stupid_simple (not verified)This article is just so typical of the problems intellectual liberals have in communicating. They forget the narrative is not about the writer (A), but the reader (B). This narrative is too long and complex, and I like complex reading, for most Americans. How about telling this like you're talking to a ten year old. Perhaps most of the US population will get it.
The simple report is the Dems lost. Doesn't matter by what statistical explanation conjured, they plain and simple lost.
They will continue to lose as long as they keep it complex. Keeping it simple is not keeping it stupid, but keeping it stupid can be keeping it simple. Knowing the difference is what the Dems have to figure out if they're gonna get back on track. k.i.s.s
Christ/Marlowe=>quitter paid
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 20:40 — Anonarcmous (not verified)Christ/Marlowe=>quitter paid for by Republicans/lobbysists, etc.
Sorry Stupid 01:29, this
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 21:11 — Anonymous (not verified)Sorry Stupid 01:29, this piece is an analysis, not a talking point.
Is that simple enough for you?
Progressive = socialist =
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 21:15 — Anonymous (not verified)Progressive = socialist = fail
The biggest problem of
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 23:08 — Power Struggle (not verified)The biggest problem of America's political system is arguably the "winner-take-all" paradigm. What we need is proportional representation.
In case you read this
Sun, 11/21/2010 - 23:28 — Anonymous (not verified)In case you read this article as a sort of Defense of the Democrats, an extended, more opinionated version of this article is available here: http://www.zcommunications.org/party-s-over-by-john-kane
>>The biggest problem of
Mon, 11/22/2010 - 04:16 — PhilipInDenver (not verified)>>The biggest problem of America's political system is arguably the "winner-take-all" paradigm. What we need is proportional representation.
YES!!! Plus:
1) lobbys get more representation than the electorate. We need to put limits the lobby system's access to elected officials;
2) filibustering is too easy. It incentivizes gridlock over compromise. We need to make it harder to filibuster, or to limit how much it's allowed;
Summary: the system is broken - rather than endlessly "throwing the bums out", but getting the same results, how about fixing the system?
"Progressive = socialist =
Mon, 11/22/2010 - 08:23 — Pere Ubu (not verified)"Progressive = socialist = fail"
aaand there's another lovely Glennbeck listener.
Glennbeck - Sesame Street for wingnuts.
(A) I see nothing
Mon, 11/22/2010 - 08:42 — Robert Meek (not verified)(A) I see nothing particularly wrong with this article.
(B) If you don't like it, although I would be the first to insist you have every right to express your opinions, with all the sniping I'm reading, it behooves us to remember that no one is forcing you to read it.
(C) My biggest issue with this article is "In the Senate, Democrats have lost at least six seats, now wielding only a narrow majority instead of their former 'filibuster-proof' sixty or more seats."
I am so weary of them calling their 60 seats "filibuster proof" when they plagued themselves with these "Blue Dog Democrats" who aligned with the Republicans.
For that matter, who the hell came up with such an asinine term as "Blue Dog" for these so-called Democrats? The correct term, I do believe, since they refused to change parties, is turncoats, and cowards.
I think what both sides have
Mon, 11/22/2010 - 10:49 — Anonymous (not verified)I think what both sides have seemed to miss is the swing votes are centrists that are tired of the poor sportmanship by both sides (we won and the rest of you watch out) and obvious corporate ownership of the government in general. The only people truly reaching across the aisle for a cooperative effort are lobbyists, and the "cooperation" they are looking for is the sell out of citizens needs to corporations' desires. Centrists swing to almost any change until the day strong third party exists. I almost believe that even a red or blue party that truly promoted drastic change in campaign finance laws ( limits to how much any one candidate can spend or have spent towards any one campaign, all sources included) and tight restrictions on wealthy lobbyists could make a true sweep. Unfortunately I don't see either hand doing that.
Anonymous, from k.i.s.s,
Mon, 11/22/2010 - 10:53 — keep_it_stupid_simple (not verified)Anonymous, from k.i.s.s, analysis or not, talking point or not, the writer could have eliminated 75% of the self obsessed BS and reduced it to something manageable and readable instead of making it a tedious exercise of sorting out the 25% of value content.
I'd still like it told in ten year old terms. Everybody gets it then. k.i.s.s
1. shoulda, wudda,
Mon, 11/22/2010 - 17:29 — Anonymous (not verified)1. shoulda, wudda, coulda.
2. There was so much repetition here I thought It WAS written for a ten-year-old.
GOP + WMD = LIE
Tue, 11/23/2010 - 02:29 — Anonymous (not verified)GOP + WMD = LIE
Did you realize that with
Tue, 11/23/2010 - 03:06 — Anonymous (not verified)Did you realize that with the presidential electoral college system, if only one person shows up to vote in each of the 31 least populous states and they all vote for the same candidate while all registered voters show up in all the other states and all vote for the other candidate, the first candidate will win? Gee, wonder if that was the "original intent" of the founders.
thank god/allah/budda/etc i
Tue, 11/23/2010 - 21:12 — david distefano (not verified)thank god/allah/budda/etc i live on the left coast of california. california bucked the tide, because of the left coast, and elected a complete slate of dems for all the statewide offices including the very liberal sen. boxer. but then again this area is very well educated and has the ability to think for themselves, something that the vast majority of beer swilling, nascar loving, dancing with the stars watching americans can not do.
K.I.S.S. The problem
Sun, 11/28/2010 - 18:59 — S. Hubinette (Research Historian) (not verified)K.I.S.S.
The problem with "dumming" down the information, is that the individuals who are not capable or willing to analyze what they are being told, (to take the time to learn how to test), make decision not on knowledge, but on belief, for them, belief, will, and perceived experience is at least equal to if not greater than truth and knowledge. For them, i.e., the person who has no knowledge of Climate Change, but has a "belief" considers himself/her-self(s) position equal to that of an individual who may have a lifetime of knowledge c concerning the subject, an actual "expert" with the Phd, and sees no problems with their position.
How do you communicate with people who are not able of comprehending things greater than a 6th Grade level of comprehension?
A cursory glance at the
Mon, 12/06/2010 - 14:02 — Frances in California (not verified)A cursory glance at the Comments tells me the trolls are out in force, slamming the intellectual authors T/O tends to publish for "not being dumb enough". Listen you stupid-and-proud simpletons, T/O publishes deep thinkers who elucidate their mental machinations for people capable of absorbing the logic or at least of trying to figure if out. You Dumb-Downers do have a future however, in marketing sugar-coated cereal. Stop polluting this Comment section.