A couple of weeks ago Public
Policy Polling, which hires out to Democrats, published results alleging
that support for certain senators, including Landrieu, dropped if they voted
against a bill known as “Manchin-Toomey” after its sponsors that would increase
the amount and intrusiveness of background checks for ownership, expanding a system that,
if anything, increases the likelihood of crimes being committed with guns.
Landrieu voted for the bill.
Then yesterday a poll put out by Defend
Louisiana, begun as a pro-gun rights by Republican state Rep. Jeff Thompson,
showed in contrast that people were less likely to vote for Landrieu as a
result of that vote. Haughtily, the Landrieu campaign sniffed that this result
was part of a “push poll,” meaning one that had questions designed to lead
respondents to a certain answer.
The irony, of course, was that the PPP poll was much closer to this description
than the Defend Louisiana effort. The PPP question in question read, “Does Mary
Landrieu’s vote in support of background checks make you more or less likely to
support her for re-election, or does it not make a difference,” to which 44
percent said more likely, 26 less.
But that’s not what the bill was about. There already are background
checks, and anybody not a criminal or survivalist would be as unlikely to
support no background checks at all as they would be to vote against apple pie
and motherhood; that vote was not about instituting background checks in an environment
where none existed. The bill was about expanding them, including problematic sections
dealing with expanded and national registries plugged into an inefficient and
ineffective system. More accurate would have been a question along the lines
of, “Does Mary Landrieu’s vote in support of legislation that expands and increases
government intervention in background checks make you more or less likely to
support her for re-election, or does it not make a difference?
In contrast, the Defend Louisiana question asked, “Senator Mary
Landrieu recently voted for gun control legislation. Does her support of gun
control legislation make you more or less likely to vote for her,” where 48
percent said not and 30 percent said it would. This question wording is a
statement of fact: Manchin-Toomey is gun control legislation, and she voted for
it. It is not as specific as the other in content, but neither is it misleading
like the other. It does a more valid job of measuring likely voter sentiment.
Naturally, in both instances just one issue is being measured, so it
each case it’s a reach to say what impact that vote has on the decision to vote
for her, given the universe and mix of issues and other factors that play into
a vote decision. Eighteen months from now, this might rank twentieth on the
list of reasons to evaluate a vote to re-elect, or even if it’s the most important
the next two or three in rank might weigh twice as heavily. So it’s difficult
to say really what impact this issue will have.
Yet far more worrisome to Landrieu should be the Defend Louisiana
question that asks about her reelection chances: “Do you favor re-electing Senator
Mary Landrieu?” A stunning 45 percent, collected from a sample that of 582 that
accurately reflects the racial breakdown of registered voters statewide and
actually oversampled on Democrats, said they would not, compared to 37 percent
in favor. Intriguingly, the poll also gave a breakdown on the likelihood of voting,
and the most likely voters still were 44-39 not in favor.
This shows for any chance of winning a campaign on life support, with
the only thing tempering this very bad news for an incumbent is that these
results did not come from a heads-up match against declared Republican
candidate Rep. Bill Cassidy and it is
almost a year-and-a-half to the election. However, should six months from now
results like these appear in a Cassidy-Landrieu pairing, barring a major
misstep by Cassidy before election day he can call the movers to transfer the
contents of his office from the Longworth to Hart building in a year’s time.
No comments:
Post a Comment