Assessing the 2012 U.S. presidential election.
Panagopoulos, Costas ; Cohen, Jeffrey E.
Like all but three presidents since the end of the Second World
War, Barack Obama was reelected in 2012. (1) Obama triumphed over
Republican challenger Mitt Romney by 332-206 in the Electoral College
and by 51 to 47% in the national popular vote. Obama secured a second
term with fewer electoral votes and fewer popular votes than he had
accrued in the 2008 election cycle, becoming only the second Democrat in
U.S. history, the other being Franklin Roosevelt, to win a majority of
the popular vote more than once. Most preelection polls showed modest
advantages for Obama (relative to Romney) over the course of the
campaign, but the contest between the two contenders, at least according
to preelection polls that registered voter preferences, remained close
throughout (Panagopoulos 2013).
The president faced several headwinds in his reelection quest.
First, despite signs of economic recovery from the severe recession that
began in 2008, the economy remained fragile. Economic growth was anemic.
During 2009, gross domestic product (GDP) growth fell by 2.3% but only
rebounded in 2010 and 2011 by 2.5% and 1.8%, respectively. This compares
with an average GDP growth rate of 3.2% for all years from 1946 through
2011. (2) Unemployment tells a similar story. The unemployment rate
stood at 8.2% in January 2012, about 2.4 percentage points higher than
the average for all months from 1948 through 2011, according to data
provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. (3) Thus, on the economic
front, often among the first factors that analysts look at in predicting
and accounting for election outcomes, Barack Obama did not appear an
overly successful steward. And the public seemed to agree that the
president's economic leadership was lackluster. From mid-May 2009
onward, Gallup polls showed more voters disapproved of the
president's handling of the economy than approved. (4)
But elections are not only about economics. The passage of other
important legislation may affect a president's reelection
prospects, which is one reason Paul Light (1982), among others, urges
presidents to hit the ground running to secure major legislative
accomplishments. In the legislative domain, Obama was also challenged.
His signature piece of domestic legislation, health care reform (or
so-called Obamacare), was controversial. Early in the debate on health
care reform, pluralities of voters disapproved of the president's
job in handling the issue according to Gallup. Over the first six months
of 2012, well into the reelection season, disapproval on health care ran
ahead of approval by 15-25 percentage points in almost all Gallup polls.
(5) Additionally, the passage of Obamacare contributed to a major voter
backlash against the administration and to the emergence of the Tea
Party, which led to a resounding election defeat for the Democrats in
the 2010 midterm congressional elections.
Looking at general indicators of public opinion would not
necessarily indicate that Obama would be a formidable competitor. His
overall job disapproval ratings tended to outpace his approval numbers
by about two percentage points on average during the first six months of
2012, although his favorability ratings were stronger with about a four
percentage-point edge for favorable versus unfavorable evaluations. Such
modest favorability advantages do not portend a strong electoral
showing.
Despite these challenges for Obama, elections are contests between
two candidates. In some respects, Obama likely benefitted from disarray
and other developments in the GOP. First, Romney was not the darling of
the Republican right wing, the strongest faction within the party.
Romney had to contest for the nomination, along with other contenders
including former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Pennsylvania
U.S. Senator Rick Santorum, and Texas Governor Rick Perry, who, at one
point or another were frontrunners in the GOP field. Although Romney
emerged without clear evidence that the primaries divided the party,
Obama appeared to have more enthusiastic backing from Democrats than
Romney had among Republicans. Obama also outpaced Romney in campaign
fundraising, raising $1,123 billion overall compared to $1,019 billion
for Romney, according to reports filed with the Federal Election
Commission.
Overview of the Special Issue
This symposium explores the nuances of the 2012 presidential
election cycle. We have assembled seven articles that touch on important
aspects of the presidential election, including the primary and general
election campaigns.
Four of our articles deal with the contest within the Republican
Party for its nomination. Since 1976, every presidential election
contest has had a series of nationally televised debates. These debates
not only have become institutionalized, but offer the voters a rare
comparison between the candidates on the same venue and have become
among the most viewed of election campaign events. Thus, researchers
naturally ask, what effect do the presidential debates have on voters
and the election? Our first article, "All Knowledge Is Not Created
Equal: Knowledge Effects and the 2012 Presidential Debates," by
Jeffrey A. Gottfried, Bruce W. Hardy, Kenneth M. Winneg, and Kathleen
Hall Jamieson, asks a key question: what do voters learn from debates,
if anything? The authors offer an important addition to extant knowledge
by focusing on the conditions at the debate under which voter learning
may occur. Using two waves from the Annenberg Public Policy
Center's Institutions of Democracy 2012 Political Knowledge Survey
panel, Gottfried and colleagues find that voters do learn about issues
and candidate positions from watching the debates. But more importantly,
knowledge was learned at a greater rate when the candidate's
presented accurate information that the other candidate did not
challenge, compared to when the opposing candidate did challenge that
information. Moreover, consistent with confirmation bias theory, when
information was contested by a candidate, voters' preferences for
one candidate over the other affected learning. Their findings open a
score of additional questions and have implications for the conduct of
debates.
Our second article on the Republican nomination, "Following
the Money: Super Political Action Committees (Super PACs) and the 2012
Presidential Nomination" by Dino P. Christenson and Corwin D.
Smidt, probes the perennial issue of money in politics. This question is
all the more crucial in the wake of the Citizens United decision by the
Supreme Court decision in 2010, which held that the government could not
regulate independent expenditures by corporations, associations, or
labor unions. There were at least two consequences of this decision, the
strengthening of Super PACs and the large amounts of money that they
were able to collect and spend. Christenson and Smidt ask what impact
Super Pac spending had on the contest for the Republican nomination.
Using a novel panel design, they find that Super PAC spending tended to
complement the spending of the major candidates and, thus, did not
appear to have an independent effect on the nomination.
The third article that addresses the nomination process,
"Momentum and Media in the 2012 Republican Presidential
Nomination," by Ernest B. McGowen and Daniel J. Palazzolo, looks at
the interrelationship between candidate momentum and media reporting.
Conducting a content analysis of major newspapers, they compare
reporting in those newspapers with how often the candidates are
mentioned and whether the mentions are positive versus negative. They
find that media reporting tends to correspond to the momentum of
candidates, based upon candidate vote results and fundraising in the
primary season. One of the most intriguing and unexpected findings was
that the correspondence between momentum and news reporting did not seem
to hold for Mitt Romney, the front runner during the primary period. One
question for future research is whether this finding is unique to Romney
or applies to frontr--unners in general.
The final article that considers the nomination campaign is
"The 2012 Iowa Republican Caucus and Its Effects on the
Presidential Nomination Contest," by Todd Donovan, David Redlawsk,
and Caroline Tolbert. Donovan et al., extend their earlier research on
the impact of the Iowa caucus and New Hampshire primary on nomination
processes and outcomes. Since the mid-1970s, when caucuses and primaries
supplanted the convention for selecting the parties' candidates for
the presidency, there has been concern about the outsized influence of
the Iowa caucus and New Hampshire primary on who wins the nomination.
Part of that concern is that neither state is representative of voters
nationally and that Iowa caucus goers in particular are not even
representative of Republicans in that state. One rationale for the
greater emphasis on caucuses and primaries is that they would be more
representative of voters than the convention system in selecting the
parties' candidates for the president. If these early states have
outsized influence on the nomination and are unrepresentative, then the
post-1970s nomination system is not living up to its promise. But
Donovan et al. find that Iowa caucus goers in 2012 are representative of
Republican voters in that state. On the other hand, the Iowa caucus
results had a pronounced impact on the nomination. Thus, while some may
criticize the importance of Iowa in selecting a candidate for office,
the media attention to the caucus helps introduce and define the
candidates to voters nationwide. Donovan et al.'s findings are
important to critics of our nomination process and advocates of various
reforms.
Our second set of articles looks at influences over voters in the
general election campaign. The first article in this set, "Winning
with a Bad Economy," by Justine D'Elia and Helmut Norpoth,
addresses the question raised in this introduction: If the economy was
so weak, how did Obama win? This question has important theoretical
implications, as well as practical ones, since so much research on
elections stresses the implications of economic performance, especially
for incumbents running for reelection. D'Elia and Norpoth, using
the 2012 American National Election Study (ANES), find that voters were
more likely to blame Obama's predecessor, George W. Bush, for the
weak economy than Obama. The severity of the Great Recession of
2008-2009 probably accounts for voters holding Bush accountable three
years after he left office, much like voters blamed Herbert Hoover for
the Great Depression for many years, to the electoral advantage of the
Democrats. Furthermore, despite the sluggish recovery, voters credited
Obama for its improvement and were somewhat optimistic about its
continued improvement under Obama's stewardship. From this
analysis, it appears that voters have a more complex understanding of
the economy and political accountability than the standard retrospective
voting theory.
Over 60 years ago, the authors of The American Voter (Campbell et
al. I960) set out a typology of factors that they argued affect the vote
decision, party identification, issues, and candidate traits. Given the
general lack of information about politics and public affairs, the
American Voters authors, and their followers, have focused attention on
party identification and candidate traits. Our second article,
"Candidate Character Traits in the 2012 Presidential
Election," by David B. Holian and Charles Prysby, asks whether
perceptions of Barack Obama's and Mitt Romney's personal
traits affected vote choice in the 2012 election, building on a long
line of important research. Using the 2012 ANES, Holian and Prysby find
that Obama had an advantage over Romney on three of four traits,
empathy, integrity, and competence, and that both candidates had similar
ratings for the fourth trait, leadership. Obama's trait perception
advantage was not due to positive and strong ratings from voters, but
rather from the poor ratings voters gave to Romney. Overall,
Obama's trait perceptions were a mixed bag of unfavorable and
favorable ratings. Given Obama's mixed assessment and Romney's
poor assessment from voters, it is illuminating that Obama's trait
advantage had a strong effect on the vote.
In a recent article, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristoff
criticized political scientists, and other social scientists, for their
inability and/or unwillingness to predict important events. (6) But for
almost two decades, there has been a vibrant literature on predicting
presidential election outcomes, among other elections. The authors of
our last article, Michael S. Lewis-Beck and Charles Tien, have been
important contributors to that literature, which aims to apply social
scientific theory for election prediction. In "Proxy Models and
Nowcasting: U.S. Presidential Elections in the Future," Lewis-Beck
and Tien bring two innovations to the literature on presidential
election prediction, as well as adding the 2012 election to the small
set of cases for analysis. First, they develop a proxy model, followed
by their nowcasting model. Unlike a prediction model, which relies on
what theory suggests will influence the vote result, a proxy model aims
to maximize predictive ability, that is, to produce the most accurate
election prediction. Lewis-Beck and Tien rely on one variable in their
proxy model, the difference between voters who say that business
conditions are better as opposed to worse, based on the University of
Michigan Survey of Consumers. Nowcasting allows updating of the
prediction as new data become available, a possibility with the Survey
of Consumers, since it is fielded monthly. The Lewis-Beck and Tien proxy
model is quite accurate, plus it is able to predict the election outcome
accurately as much as six months prior to the election. Thus, Lewis-Beck
and Tien have made an important advance in election forecasting.
We hope readers agree these selections help demystify some aspects
of the 2012 presidential election. Although this symposium merely
scratches the surface in terms of studying and understanding the 2012
election in context, the articles will help answer some important
questions and, perhaps more importantly, raise new ones for further
scrutiny and inquiry. Scholars wdl likely grapple with these and related
research questions for many years to come, but, we warn, the 2016 cycle
is just around the corner!
References
Campbell, Angus, Philip E. Converse, Warren E. Miller, and Donald
E. Stokes. I960. The American Voter. New York: Wiley.
Light, Paul Charles. 1982. The President's Agenda: Domestic
Policy Choice from Kennedy to Carter (with Notes on Ronald Reagan).
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Panagopoulos, Costas. 2013. "Campaign Effects and Dynamics in
the 2012 Election." Forum 10 (4): 36-39.
COSTAS PANAGOPOULOS AND JEFFREY E. COHEN
Fordham University
(1.) The three one-term presidents are Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter,
and George H. W. Bush. Seven presidents' administration before
Obama won reelection-Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy-Johnson, Nixon, Reagan,
Clinton, George W. Bush.
(2.) Source: http://www.measuringworth.com.
(3.) These statistics were acquired from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics Web site, http://www.bls.gov.
(4.) See pollster.com for details on public approval of the
president's handling of the economy.
(5.) These statistics were collected from pollster.com.
(6.) "The Decline of the Public Intellectual?", New York
Times. February 19, 2014.
Costas Panagopoulos is a professor of political science and
director of the Center for Electoral Politics and Democracy at Fordham
University.
Jeffrey E. Cohen is a professor of political science at Fordham
University and the author of numerous hooks on the American presidency.