This one commissioned by an
interest group through a firm that usually conducts polls for Republicans showed
GOP Rep. Bill Cassidy leading Landrieu
50-44, significantly putting him at pulling a simple majority of the vote, It
continues a trend for months now where the combined vote of all announced
Republicans (the two also-rans from the GOP picked up 5 percent of the
remainder, which means the pollsters prompted initially undecided respondents
to make a choice) exceeds the vote for Landrieu.
But the state’s mainstream media hardly
touched the significant breakthrough for Cassidy. It was mentioned
briefly by New Orleans Times-Picayune
reporter Bruce Alpert, who then immediately dismissed it as “it should be taken
with a grain of salt” because it “seems to over-represent Republican voters and
under-represent African Americans.”
Which only goes to show that
Alpert either is lazy or disingenuous. The poll did not claim to be of registered voters in the state, but of likely voters. And using the 2010 Senate
election turnout as a model, which actually will underestimate registered
Republicans and overestimate registered Democrats given changes in voter rolls
from 2010 to now (from Nov.,
2010 to Jun.,
2014 about 112,000 fewer Democrats and around 39,000 more Republicans), the
poll’s breakdown of 50 percent Democrats, 35 percent Republicans matches up
favorably with the Nov. 2, 2010 turnout proportions of 52-33. As far racial
sampling goes, the poll garnered 71 percent white, 24 percent black respondents
while in the 2010 election the ratio was 70:27, slightly off. Even accounting
for these small differences, it’s clear: Cassidy has a small but significant
lead over Landrieu, confirming the trend.
So Alpert is dead wrong in
dismissing the poll other than “it underlines that this will be a very tough
race for Landrieu.” But more
informed observers also are misdiagnosing the contest, and from their
stated reasons because of some mystique of Landrieu as an incumbent who has won
tough races before by muting partisan lines.
Yet the data clearly contradict
this hypothesis, not just from the polling consistently putting Landrieu behind
the combined GOP vote at this stage, but also from the larger dynamics
involved. It’s instructive to review Landrieu’s last campaign, where at this
point she consistently held a small but significant lead over state Treasurer John
Kennedy. Few polls ever put Kennedy at or in the lead, but one
did so in July, 2008 which demonstrated the opening was there for him to win if
the dynamics went his way.
They did not. Within two months,
the fiscal
crisis that had been brewing stemming from Democrats pushing through the
Community Reinvestment Act with significant later alterations also
including some Republican aid came
to a head, causing blame to be placed upon the GOP creating a bad electoral
environment for it in 2008. At that point for political convenience sake
Kennedy may have wished he had stayed a liberal Democrat, which he had run as
for the Senate in 2004 but switched parties about a year prior to this election
(which did not bring as much benefit to him as perhaps he had hoped since this
made him look like an opportunist to some). Further assisting Landrieu was that
the candidacy of future Pres. Barack Obama
historically pumped up black turnout to an all-time high, surpassing that of
white voters, which helpfully spilled over into her campaign.
By contrast, now Landrieu
continues to be behind and dynamics are working against her. She will not
receive a bonus of voters from Obama; indeed, she will suffer from his deep
unpopularity and that of his policies in Louisiana (confirmed in the poll),
which is unlikely to change soon enough if ever. Plus, midterm elections tend
to have Republicans disproportionately turn out to vote relative to Democrats. In
short, in 2008 she held a lead that dynamics would extend into a decent-sized
victory; in 2014, she is running behind and dynamics, unless entirely
unanticipated events intervene, promise to suppress any chance she has of
reversing that situation.
The story has not changed since
the beginning of the year: the evidence is that Landrieu has fallen behind and
her reelection chances are increasingly troubled. No data nor events have
surfaced to suggest otherwise.
3 comments:
What about Rob Maness? I and a lot of other voters are rooting for him...
Sadow is spot onre Landrieu's chances and Mannes doesn't stand a chance.
Jeff, do you really think Louisiana Republicans will be able to unite behind Cassidy if it comes to a run-off? Can you see Maness and his supporters out campaigning for Cassidy post November 4? I don't. Senator Landrieu will still be around to meet with President Hillary Clinton in the Oval Office.
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