McAllister won
a runoff spot because in a general election field of 14, in an election that
was standalone for many voters, he mobilized two constituencies large enough to
get him over the 15 percent of the vote needed to capture it. One was the
anti-politician crowd, especially incensed at the big spending that hallmarks
the Pres. Barack
Obama Administration that Congress (with too little Republican resistance
to stop) continues to endorse, who looked for a credible non-politician to
back. The other was people less reliably interested in politics but turned on
by his affiliation with the family that stars in the reality television show Duck Dynasty, differentiating him from
the other reliably conservative Republicans like Riser in the race. By
apparently plowing hundreds of thousands of dollars of his own funds into the
contest, much in
the last week, he made himself visible enough to have those kinds of voters
activated or aware he was out there.
But the lightning is unlikely to
strike twice given the nature of the election will be different. He will have nearly
triple his vote proportion, with a limited base on which to expand. Other
Republicans in the race tried to position themselves as Washington outsiders,
but they only got about 20 percent of the vote. Some may gravitate to
McAllister, but others went with the other pair of candidates because they
preferred more experience and their issue preferences. Many of them will sit it
out or side with Riser. And it’s not likely that significantly more casual
voters can be mobilized using the celebrity factor than were there for the
general election.
That’s not so bad because turnout,
just above 21 percent in that election, probably will dip below that for the
runoff where there is nothing else on the ballot and some people disgruntled that
their favored candidate didn’t make it who prefer neither Riser nor McAllister,
Republicans who scarcely differ on issue preferences, will sit it out. That
will be true especially among black Democrats, who appear to have comprised
about 20 percent of the electorate and most of whom who voted for either of the
two black candidates in the race. Not many of this group will feel like voting
for either very conservative candidate.
That is bad for McAllister, because
he’s the one behind by 14 points from the start. If you remove half of the
other Republicans’ votes and half of the black vote (assuming those that do
vote split them), the electorate has shrunk by a quarter, meaning that of the
remaining 80,000 or so, Riser already has over 40 percent of them, and needs
just 9,000 or so more to win, while McAllister would need 24,000. Splitting half
of these votes gives Riser that margin. And this 17 percent turnout is an
optimistic scenario: if it falls to 15, then Riser needs only about 3,000, so
he could lose four of five of these votes and still pull it out. And Riser has
the campaign resources to collect these figures.
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