The polls: presidential referendum effects in the 2006 midterm elections.
Cohen, Jeffrey E.
Many commentators saw the 2006 midterm elections as a referendum on
George W. Bush's presidency, especially his unpopular Iraq War policy. Presidential referendum effects may be highly likely given the
degree of party polarization and the concomitant attachment of large
numbers of voters to the Democratic and Republican parties. But local
factors, especially incumbency effects, may also have affected the
outcome of the 2006 midterm contests. Using state-level presidential
approval polls, analysis finds that Bush's approval, an indicator
of referendum voting, had little impact on voting in Senate contests,
once applying controls for the ideological and partisan composition of
state voting populations. In contrast, even with these controls,
Bush's approval influenced voting in gubernatorial contests. But
Iraq War battle deaths affected voting for senators, suggestive of another type of referendum effect. Battle deaths, however, did not
affect the gubernatorial races.
**********
Democrats decisively defeated the Republicans in the 2006 midterm
elections, unseating Republicans across the nation and for all types of
offices up for grabs. Overall, the Democrats realized seat gains in both
houses of Congress and the state governorships. For instance, Democrats
gained 6 Senate seats out of 33 contested, increasing their
representation in the upper chamber from 45 to 51, thereby assuming
control of that chamber. Similarly, a gain of 30 seats led to Democratic
control of the House, after Republican control that dated back to 1995.
And 2006 saw Democrats control a majority of governorships, increasing
from 22 to 28. In each of these cases, the Democrats entered the 2006
races as the minority and emerged with the majority. Democratic party
fortunes also improved in the state legislatures. Prior to the midterm,
the Democrats held 21 state houses, the Republicans 19, 9 were split,
with 1, Nebraska, nonpartisan. Coming out of the midterm, Democratic
control of state houses rose to 23, with a decline of 2 for the
Republicans, while 9 still remained under split control.
Moreover, in all cases of U.S. Senate and gubernatorial races, the
Republicans were unable to take any seats that the Democrats held going
into the election. Another indication of the decisiveness of the
Democratic victory was that almost all closely contested races fell into
the Democratic column, such as the Senate seats in Virginia and North
Dakota; Republicans could win only a smattering of close contests.
The consistent Democratic electoral showing in all regions and for
all types of races led many postelection accounts to argue that national
factors worked to the Democrats' advantage. In other words, the
2006 midterms, unlike many other midterms, was a national election, a
referendum on President George W. Bush, especially his Iraq War policy.
Yet local conditions might still have mattered; national affairs were
not necessarily the whole story of the 2006 midterm.
For instance, local scandals, such as those associated with
Ohio's Republican Governor Robert Taft, presumably affected the
race for governor in that state, in which Democrat Ted Strickland beat
Republican John Blackwell by a hefty 60 to 37 percent margin. This was
in a state that had for the past several election cycles been the
quintessential battleground state, with Republicans and Democrats
usually in close contests, but with the Republicans often edging out the
Democrats.
In addition, some Republicans running for election possessed a
personal popularity that allowed them to buck the national tides in
2006. For example, Republican incumbent governor of California, Arnold
Schwarzenegger, was highly popular. His popularity had recovered from
dips of the past year, and he managed to win a comfortable election
victory in a state that has been decidedly Democratic in recent years.
As another example, Richard Lugar, Republican incumbent senator from
Indiana, won approximately 90 percent of the vote; the Democrats did not
field a candidate to run against him. Lugar faced only token opposition
from the Libertarians.
This article asks what impact the presidency had on the midterm
elections in 2006. Was the election's outcome a referendum on an
unpopular president and his unpopular war policy in Iraq? At the time of
the 2006 midterm, Bush's job approval ranged in the 35 to 40
percent level, according to the major national polls. (1) With regard to
the Iraq War, CNN reported a 33 percent approval rating for the war in
the first week of November 2006, and 53 percent of respondents to the
USA Today/Gallup Poll of the same week called the Iraq War a mistake.
Other questions from these firms, as well as polls results from other
firms, all point to the same conclusion--the war in Iraq was unpopular
with the public by sizeable margins. Did Bush's approval and public
opinion on the war affect voting in the midterm contests?
To test for whether the 2006 midterm could be considered a
referendum on the president, I use newly available state-level polls
from SurveyUSA which provide us with presidential approval levels, as
well as other important public opinion indicators such as state
partisanship and ideological leanings, across all fifty states.
SurveyUSA has been conducting such polls and making their results
publicly available since mid 2005. Despite some limitations, discussed
below, these survey data have been used to some effect in recent
research (Jacobson 2006; Cohen 2006).
The next section of this article discusses the literature on
subpresidential and midterm elections. Then I present the SurveyUSA
polls used in this study; analysis of the senatorial and gubernatorial
midterm election results follows. The conclusion raises some issues of
interpretation, especially of detecting presidential referendum effects
in a highly polarized political context.
Local and National Factors in Subpresidential and Midterm Elections
Due to the federal structure of our political system, a combination
of local and national factors determines the outcomes of subpresidential
elections. National tides may influence the outcome of subpresidential
elections, but their impact may vary, in part a function of their
intensity. On the other hand, local factors, acting like breakwaters,
may soften the impact of these national tides on local elections.
Local factors that affect subpresidential elections are primarily
structural in nature. For instance, voting is for candidates as opposed
to parties. Voters must know the party of the local candidate and the
president and then decide to reward or punish the candidate for being of
the same party of the president. And some voters may refuse to tie local
officials to the president in such a way, because the functional job
duties of the local official are purely local (Carsey and Wright 1998a;
Stein 1990).
Moreover, many local elections are not held at the same time as the
presidential election, further divorcing the local contest from the
presidency. When the president does not appear on the ballot at the same
time as the local candidate does, voters may not connect the local
election to the president. In part to insulate local politics from
national tides and presidential association, many states in the
mid-twentieth century changed the timing of their gubernatorial
elections. The intention of this reform was to focus state citizenry on
the needs of the state executive and keep presidential considerations
from contaminating that decision. Similarly, staggered terms for office,
such as the U.S. Senate, to some degree also insulate that body from
presidential and national politics--only one third of the body is up for
election at a time, which limits the number of seats that can change
hands in any one election.
Further, office holders may build incumbency advantages that will
also insulate them from the effects of national tides. Members of
Congress have developed and exploited resources of office that help in
that regard. Perhaps most critically, office holders, due in part to
their own efforts, but also a function of their names appearing on the
ballot, build a personal following and develop a personal image. This
"personal vote" has helped many an incumbent, well-liked by
his or her constituents, to survive national political storms, such as
unpopular presidents, failed policies, and economic slowdowns
(Ansolabehere, Snyder, and Stewart 2000; Herrera and Yawn 1999;
Lockerbie 1999; Dawes and Bacot 1998; Swain, Borrelli, and Reed 1998;
Erikson and Palfrey 1998; Levitt and Wolfram 1997; Cox and Katz 1996;
King and Gelman 1991; Garand and Gross 1984; Cain, Ferejohn, and Fiorina
1984; Gross and Garand 1984; Campbell 1983; Cover and Brumberg 1982;
Alford and Hibbing 1981; Cover 1977, 1980; Abramowitz 1975; Erikson
1971).
High local barriers to national tides are currently in place. Only
eleven state governors are now elected in presidential years; thirty-six
are elected during the congressional midterm and the remaining five
during odd-number years. (2) Members of Congress still enjoy a
substantial incumbency advantage. Over 90 percent of incumbents who run
for reelection win, including 90 percent in 1994 and 95 percent in 2006,
years when the party controlling the House lost its hold of that
chamber. In those years, most seat change came from open contests which
swung Republican in 1994 and Democrat in 2006.
Yet extreme polarization in the party system may be nationalizing
subpresidential elections, as voters view politicians as members of a
party team. Now, not only do the parties differ across almost every
policy domain, but party differences coincide with ideological
differences. Few liberal Republicans or conservative Democrats currently
exist in the ranks of office holders or voters. Further, the number of
self-identified Independents has dwindled and party identification
appears as perhaps the strongest determinant of the individual vote
choice (Bartels 2000; Jacobson 2005; Hetherington 2001).
Partisanship and ideology also strongly structure the public's
opinion about the president and his policies. Presidential copartisans
rarely disapprove of his job in office; identifiers of the opposition
party rarely approve. The partisan gap in presidential approval is at
its highest rates since poll questions have existed (Bond and Fleisher
2001; Jacobson 2006). Given this polarized environment, did presidential
approval and the Iraq War play a role in the 2006 midterm election
outcomes? These are the questions that I address in this article. (3)
Presidential Approval at the State Level: The SurveyUSA Polls
To test for presidential referendum effects in the 2006 Senate and
gubernatorial races requires data on public attitudes toward the
president, as well as on vote decisions and/or election outcomes. For
instance, one can analyze individual vote choice by using data from
national surveys, like the American National Election Studies, that ask
voters about their attitudes toward the president and their vote choice.
Such studies, however, cannot tell about factors affecting state-level
outcomes, which are important because they determine seat distributions
and party control in Congress. Moreover, major national surveys like
these will not be publicly available for analysis for some time to come.
Another option is to use state-level results from exit polls, like
those from Edison-Mitofsky, which conducted the major exit poll for the
consortium of large national news organizations. Exit polls have the
virtue of being conducted at the voting site, thereby minimizing voter
recall problems. But issues arise in using presidential approval
measures gleaned from the exit poll. Presidential approval and vote
choice are measured simultaneously in exit polls and the possibility
exists that vote choice will affect attitudes toward the president as
voters psychologically justify or rationalize their vote choice. Another
problem specific to the 2006 midterm is that Edison-Mitofsky did not
conduct exit polls in all states holding contests that year, nor were
its questions uniform across the states. (4)
SurveyUSA provides us with another data source for presidential
approval and other opinions at the state level which overcome some of
the limitations noted above. First, SurveyUSA has been conducting
statewide polls that ask the presidential approval question every month,
in every state, since May 2005. Thus, we can use a presidential approval
reading taken prior to the election which provides an unambiguous
temporal ordering of opinion and the vote. SurveyUSA coverage across all
fifty states also ensures that no state with an election is left out of
the analysis.
Another advantage of the SurveyUSA polls is the use of the same
sample size per survey, 600, which generates the same sampling error
across states. SurveyUSA estimates this to be [+ or -]4.1 percent. Like
many survey organizations, SurveyUSA samples by using a random-digit
telephone-dialing process, but also employs a "robot interviewing
process." The robot poll technique, however, is somewhat
controversial.
The robot interview begins with an actor who reads the
questionnaire, which is recorded and used to interview all respondents.
Respondent voice activation technology advances the survey from question
to question. Although each respondent is in effect interviewed by the
same interviewer, which mitigates interviewer variance, the effects of
the recorded or robot interviewer on the survey response is not well
understood. SurveyUSA indirectly addresses this issue on their Web page,
where they demonstrate that their state-level results closely match the
results of other survey firms and that they have a better than average
track record in forecasting election outcomes from their data. In a
recent paper, Gary Jacobson (2006) extensively tests the SurveyUSA data
for reliability and validity and finds them quite comparable to other
state-level polls. Thus, despite this reservation, SurveyUSA provides us
with unique data to test the impact of state-level presidential approval
on state-level election contests in 2006.
SurveyUSA's data were downloaded from their Web site
(http://www.surveyusa.com). All SurveyUSA data used in this analysis are
based on the state's population, not intended voters. In these
state polls, SurveyUSA does not present breakdowns for likely voters.
To measure presidential approval, SurveyUSA uses this question:
"Do you approve or disapprove of the job George W. Bush is doing as
President?," which is identical to the Gallup job approval
question, the basis of so much research. I use the September 2006
reading. To take into account "don't know" responses, I
calculate a corrected Bush approval level: (Bush approval)/(Bush
approval + Bush disapproval). This proportion is converted into a
percentage by multiplying by 100. Across the fifty states, Bush's
corrected approval stood at 41 percent, with a standard deviation of 8,
a minimum of 23 percent, and a maximum of 61 percent.
Data and Hypotheses
Research on Senate and gubernatorial elections has identified a
number of factors that affect those outcomes in those races. (5) Some
are easily identified as either national or local, but several of these
factors seem to mix effects from both levels. Another issue to bear in
mind is that the small number of Senate and gubernatorial races in 2006
limits the number of variables that can be entered into the analysis.
The dependent variable here is the Republican percentage of the
two-party vote, defined as (Number of votes for the Republican
candidate)/(Number of votes for the Republican candidate + Number of
votes for the Democratic candidate). This proportion is turned into a
percentage by multiplying by 100.
The most obvious local factor is incumbency (see the sources cited
above), with the hypothesis that incumbents, everything else equal, will
do better in election contests than challengers. However, as the
dependent variable used here is the Republican percentage of the
two-party vote, we have to identify whether the incumbent is a Democrat
or a Republican. We expect that a Republican incumbent should positively
affect the Republican vote total, while a Democratic incumbent should
lower the vote that the Republican candidate receives in the contest.
Thus, I use separate dummy variables indicating whether a Democrat or
Republican incumbent was running for reelection. By distinguishing
between Democratic and Republican incumbents, the incumbency variable
may no longer be a purely local variable, inasmuch as partisanship has
the national connotations to voters as discussed above. The criterion
category in the analysis is states without an incumbent running.
Economic variables, such as incumbency as defined above, may also
contain both national and local elements (Gomez and Wilson 2003; Nadeau
and Lewis-Beck 2001; Carsey and Wright 1998a; Lowry, Alt, and Ferree
1998; Svoboda 1995; Niemi, Stanley, and Vogel 1995; Jacobson 1990; Chubb
1988). The literature on election outcomes finds strong effects
associated with economic factors; the party in power usually suffers
when the economy is doing poorly. Debate in that literature usually
focuses on the relative electoral impact of different economic factors.
Here I use the state's percent unemployed in September 2006, a
measure of the local economy. (6) Yet, like incumbency as defined above,
state unemployment is a consequence of national economic conditions and
policies, as well as local ones. It is neither a purely national nor
local factor.
Local political context may also affect electoral outcomes. In
particular, one would expect the Republican party to do better in places
where many Republicans live rather than few. The same expectation exists
for the distribution of conservatives versus liberals. Thus, I enter the
distribution of partisan and ideological identifiers in the state. (7)
Repeating the concern raised with regard to the partisan incumbency
variables, inasmuch as party and ideological identification in the mass
public is a national orientation rather than a local or regional one,
this local context takes on a national element as well. Thus far, all
the above control variables mix elements of local and national effects.
One variable, such as presidential approval, can be viewed as a
purely national variable, although it varies across states: the
per-capita number of Iraq War deaths from the state (Gartner, Segura,
and Barratt 2004). (8) This is a national variable because it relates
directly to a national policy, the Iraq War, a policy over which local
office holders have no jurisdiction. The hypothesis here is that, as
casualties mount, displeasure with the Republicans will mount, and the
vote total for Republican candidates will decline. However, given that
governors had no jurisdiction over this policy, whereas senators did,
voters may not hold gubernatorial candidates to account for this
consequence of that policy.
Finally, I control for the size of the state, a purely local
factor. Research has shown that election contests tend to be narrower in
larger states than smaller ones, due in part to the relative degree of
population homogeneity in small versus large states (Carsey and Wright
1998b; Hibbing and Alford 1990; Lee and Oppenheimer 1997). Again, as the
dependent variable is the Republican percentage of the two-party vote, I
have to unfold this variable's effects on the vote total. I do this
by entering two variables into the analysis, the log of population and
the square of the log of population.
Analysis
The multivariate analysis proceeds as follows. First, I present the
results of the eight control variables on the two-party vote for senator
and governor. Then I add the presidential approval variable to the
equation. Comparing across these two equations will allow me to identify
the contribution of presidential approval over and above the effects of
the other variables. Also in 2006, elections were held for thirty-three
Senate and thirty-six governorships, but the analysis here uses only
thirty-one of the Senate races because of a complicated three-way race
in one state and lack of opposition in another. (9)
Effects of the Control Variables
Turning to the baseline models, that is, the equations without the
presidential approval variable, results indicate for both senatorial and
gubernatorial elections that the estimations account for a substantial
amount of the variance in the two-party vote share, 83 percent in the
senatorial case and 67 percent for gubernatorial races. Six of the eight
variables are significant predictors in the Senate estimation, while
only three emerge as significant predictors in the gubernatorial
estimation.
For the Senate contests, presence of a Democratic incumbent, but
not a Republican, affects the vote total, as do unemployment, battle
deaths, the two population measures, and the percentage of Republican
identifiers in the state. The percentage of conservatives in the state
does not reach statistical significance, in part because of its strong
correlation with the state's Republican percentage (.64, p = .000).
In gubernatorial races, both types of incumbency status affect the
election totals with the proper signs, as does the percentage of
Republicans, but no other variable attains statistical significance.
Comparatively, it appears that national factors weigh more heavily in
the Senate races than they do in the gubernatorial contests, and I am
able to explain with these variables a greater percentage of the
variance in Senate than in gubernatorial races.
Presidential Referendum Effects in Multivariate Perspective
Senate Races, My primary question deals with the impact of
presidential approval. With these controls, how does presidential
approval fare as a predictor of the vote? Results in Table 1 report
that, with controls, Bush's approval now does not affect the Senate
outcomes, contrary to the significant effects in the bivariate analysis.
Removing the two insignificant control variables has no impact on the
Bush approval variable, which remains insignificant.
The Iraq War death variable is also a national variable, which, as
expected, drags down the vote of Republican Senate candidates. Oddly,
the battle death variable is not correlated to Bush's approval (r =
.09, p = .51), but results indicate a populace highly responsive to
battle deaths emanating from state of residence when voting for senator.
Each additional death per 100,000 lessens the Republican vote total by
nearly 14 points. States suffered on average 1.1 deaths per 100,000,
ranging from a low of 0.55 to a high of 2.89, which produces a vote loss
from low- to high-battle-death states of from 7.6 to 40.2 percent. These
are massive effects on voting behavior. (10)
How could Republican Senate candidates survive, given such war
aversion? Other factors worked in their favor, primarily the percentage
of voters who identified with Republicans. Each 1 percent increment in
Republican identifiers adds 0.84 percent to the Republican candidate
vote total. The average state contains nearly 48 percent Republican
identifiers, based upon the total of Democrats and Republicans. At this
average level, Republican Senate candidates would garner about 40
percent of the vote as a base. If all other factors canceled out, only
states with the highest battle-death totals would defeat the Republican
candidate. Still, the extreme sensitivity to battle deaths in the Iraq
War clearly cut into Republican vote totals and may have accounted for
several Republican defeats and close contests. Thus, while presidential
approval per se had little effect on the electoral performance of
Republican Senate candidates, the Iraq War did. To a significant extent,
the 2006 midterm Senate contests were a referendum on the
president's Iraq War policy.
Gubernatorial Races. Matters differ for gubernatorial races, in
which national factors have less sway, but still a hint suggests that
presidential approval might have had some marginal effect on
gubernatorial election outcomes. Before turning to that variable, note
that incumbency and a state's percentage of conservative
identifiers had the most pronounced effect on these races.
Being an incumbent governor, by these estimates, would help a
Republican by 13.5 points. Democratic incumbents similarly saw benefits,
but at lower levels, about 7.5 points. For some reason, perhaps because
of their relative political moderation, personal appeal, or ability to
evade the Iraq War issue, Republican incumbent governors bucked the
national tide against their party in the 2006 midterm. Some sense of the
crossover appeal of Republican incumbents can be seen in the negative
sign on the conservative identification variable. Each 1 percent
decrease in conservative identifiers, which here equates with increases
in the relative percentage of liberal identifiers, adds nearly 0.5
points to the Republican candidate's vote total. In other words,
Republican candidates for governor did quite well in attracting votes as
electorates became less conservative and more liberal. (11)
With the full complex of controls in place, the Bush approval
variable falls just shy of statistical significance (p = .058 using
robust regression). Eliminating the insignificant variables (12) allows
the Bush approval variable to become decidedly significant, both
statistically and substantively. The p value improves to .023, and the b
is a healthy .57, indicating that each 1 percentage point gain in
presidential approval is associated with a 0.37 percentage point gain
for Republican gubernatorial candidates. This effect is substantial but
might not be a boon to Republicans, as Bush's approval level was so
weak across so many states. This result indicates that national factors
seeped into the gubernatorial contests in 2006, but through a different
route than we found for Senate races.
Conclusions
Results presented above show that the 2006 Senate and gubernatorial
elections were in part referendums on the president, although the
mechanism through which the referendum effects operated differed for the
two offices. In the case of Senate elections, presidential approval had
little effect on electoral outcomes, but Iraq War battle deaths suffered
by a state's citizens did, and by a mighty amount. This is
consistent with the idea that state electorates view senators as
national policy makers, as their representative to a national
policy-making institution, and that state electorates hold their
senatorial candidates accountable to some degree for the local
implications of national policies, in this case battle deaths. But
voters also perceive the war as Bush's war, and in these results
can be seen voters holding senators accountable for a presidential
policy, too.
Presidential referendum effects in the 2006 gubernatorial races
worked both more directly and diffusely than in the Senate case. Here
the level of presidential approval in a state had clear implications for
Republican candidates, who saw higher vote totals when the president was
popular rather than unpopular. To a degree, voters may tie all members
of the same party to the president in office, rewarding or punishing that party's candidates based upon assessment of the
president's job performance. Such a reaction makes some sense in a
highly polarized partisan context.
At the mass level, partisanship, and its strong covariate,
ideological orientation, strongly predict attitudes toward the
president. Jointly, with these SurveyUSA data, over 80 percent of the
state-level variance in presidential approval is a function of the
relative percentage of Republicans and conservatives in a state. (13)
Thus, there is some penetration of presidential politics into
gubernatorial elections through these mechanisms.
But governors are not completely captured by
presidential-partisan-ideological effects. The Iraq War did not play a
direct role in gubernatorial campaigns. Candidates for that office did
not have to speak to the issue openly, because the governor's
office possesses no policy responsibility for the war. And by not being
in Washington and not having to go on record for or against the
president's policies through roll-call voting and the like,
Republican gubernatorial candidates could evade direct association with
the president, other than the fact of being in the same party. Plus,
they could stake out more moderate policies in an attempt to attract
moderates, liberals, Independents, and Democrats, a strategy made
necessary in blue states, where a surprisingly large number of
Republicans hold the executive mansion.
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(1.) These are the percent approval ratings from national surveys
in the first week of November 2006: FOX News/Opinion Dynamics, 38
percent; CNN, 35 percent; USA Today/Gallup, 38 percent; ABC News/Washington Post, 40 percent; Pew, 41 percent; Newsweek, 35 percent;
and Time, 37 percent.
(2.) The total adds to fifty-two because two states, New Hampshire and Vermont, have a two-year term of office for their governors.
(3.) A considerable literature has looked at presidential
referendum effects in subpresidential elections. See Atkeson and Partin
(1998); Simon, Ostrom, and Marra (1991); Marra and Ostrom (1989); Cover
(1986); Rudalevige (2001); Gronke, Koch, and Wilson (2003); and Carsey
and Wright (1998a).
(4.) While loss of several states might not compromise analysis
much if the missing states were not selected for random reasons, such is
not the case for the 2006 Edison-Mitofsky exit poll. States were not
polled because of lack of interest, for instance, states lacking close
contests or important personalities running for office. The
Edison-Mitofsky 2006 exit poll results can be found on several news
media Web sites. I used CNN's site,
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2OO6/pages/results/states/US/H/00/
epolls.0.html.
(5.) The literature on senatorial and gubernatorial elections is
huge. For representative analyses on the Senate, see Highton (2000),
Carsey and Wright (1998a), Adams and Squire (1997), and Atkeson and
Partin (1995). On gubernatorial elections, see King (2001); Carsey and
Wright (1998a); Leyden and Borrelli (1995); Svoboda (1995); Niemi,
Stanley, and Vogel (1995); Atkeson and Partin (1995); Squire and Fasmow
(1994); Kone and Winters (1993); Stein (1990); and Simon (1989).
(6.) The September figures are used because they were the latest
that were available at the time of the election. We also experimented
with the change in the unemployment level from August to September 2006,
but results found that the variable always failed to reach statistical
significance and thus is deleted from the presentation.
(7.) These estimates come from the SurveyUSA September 2006 polls.
(8.) These data come from the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count
available from http://www.icasualties.org/oif/default.aspx.
Unfortunately, the site only presents battle death totals, but not
wounded totals, by state.
(9.) In Connecticut, incumbent Joe Lieberman ran as an Independent,
having lost the Democratic primary to Ned Lamont. The Republican
senatorial candidate, Alan Schlesinger, was never a viable candidate in
this three-way race. The dependent variable, the Republican share of the
two-party vote, makes little sense here. Schlesinger garnered a mere 10
percent of the vote in the general election, receiving little election
support from the Republican establishment, which tacitly, if not
overtly, supported Lieberman's candidacy. The Republican
establishment, including the Bush administration, figured that Lieberman
had a better chance of winning than Schlesinger and that he would
continue to support the administration's Iraq policy. And in the
Indiana Senate race, Republican incumbent Richard Lugar did not face a
Democratic challenger and received only token opposition from
Libertarian candidate Steve Osborn. Thus, Connecticut and Indiana are
not included in the Senate analysis.
(10.) Although I can only speculate here as to why the effect is so
large based upon the battle death figures, it is likely that the number
of those wounded and the number killed in battle are highly correlated
at the state level. Over twenty thousand U.S. military personnel had
been wounded by the time of the midterm elections, about seven times the
rate of battle deaths. The public may be reacting to the total number of
those killed and wounded. If so, the regression results would be the
same as presented here, but the conversion metric of casualties to votes
would differ. In either case, the results demonstrate a public highly
sensitive to casualty rates.
(11.) Even when the state's Republican percentage is dropped
from the estimation, this negative sign remains intact.
(12.) Now the percentage of conservatives becomes significant,
while the formerly significant variable, the percentage of Republicans,
fails into statistical insignificance. The high collinearity between the
two is the underlying reason for this switch.
(13.) The actual regression results are Corrected Bush approval =
-.05 + .48 (Conservative %, p = .000) + .34 (Republican %, p = .000),
[R.sup.2] = .82. Recall, the Conservative % is calculated as
(Conservative %)/(Conservative % + Liberal %), and Republican % equals
(Republican %)/ (Republican % + Democratic %). No other variable used in
this analysis has a significant effect on Bush's approval.
JEFFREY E. COHEN
Fordham University
Jeffrey E. Cohen, professor of political science at Fordham
University, is the author of several books, including Presidential
Responsiveness and Public Policy-Making, as well as articles in numerous
journals, including the American Political Science Review. American
Journal of Political Science, and Journal of Politics.
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I want to thank Costas Panagopoulos for his
helpful comments on an earlier version of this feature.
TABLE 1
Robust Regression Effects of Corrected Bush Approval on the Republican
Percentage of the Two-Party Vote in Senate and Gubernatorial Races,
2006
Senate
b P* b P *
Republican incumbent 3.83 .23 3.55 .25
Democratic incumbent -11.25 .01 -11.39 .01
Unemployment 3.67 .003 3.97 .001
Iraq deaths per capita -13.92 .001 -13.55 .003
Ln stare population -63.64 .001 -66.17 .001
Ln state population-sq. 1.99 .002 2.07 .001
Republican % .84 .001 .81 .01
Conservative % -.22 .12 -.35 .11
Bush approval xx .21 .35
Constant 527.40 .001 544.73 .001
[R.sup.2] .83 .83
n 31 31
Governor
h P * b P *
Republican incumbent 14.22 .000 13.5 .000
Democratic incumbent -7.66 .01 -7.47 .01
Unemployment .37 .39 .97 .21
Iraq deaths per capita 3.82 .17 5.68 .09
Ln stare population 32.07 .20 35.1 .19
Ln state population-sq. -1.03 .21 -1.11 .20
Republican % 0.4 .02 .15 .28
Conservative % -0.23 .08 -.49 .01
Bush approval xx .64 .06
Constant -215.78 .24 -244.97 .21
[R.sup.2] .67 .70
n 36 36
* One-tailed test.
Source: SurveyUSA, midterm election results, and data collected by
author. See text for details.