As part of their plan to control
government, State Rep. John Bel Edwards
and state Democrats will try to convince the world that he received a mandate
with his election to governor. Some
already have bought into that. Don’t, because it was not.
When Gov. Bobby
Jindal won reelection four years ago, from some came the opposite reaction,
that despite his winning about two-thirds of the vote without even having to
endure a runoff this did not constitute a mandate, which is large and
widespread agreement with a candidate’s agenda that the electorate wishes to
see enacted or continued. Analysis
of the election’s data and comparison of it to the 2007 results demonstrated a
mandate existed, not just because of Jindal’s historic win margin but also as,
even as turnout declined as a result of the uncompetitiveness of the contest at
the top of the ballot, other more competitive statewide contests saw even
steeper drop-offs in turnout. Further analysis showed reduced turnout for the
governor’s race was more a product of satisfaction of the preceding four years
that of disinterest.
By contrast, the 2015 election
runoff, with higher overall turnout than in 2011 (keep in mind that typically
turnout increases by roughly a half of a percentage point from state office general
elections to runoffs; in this case, by that margin), displayed indicators of
lack of voter enthusiasm for the contest. Interestingly, despite the more
competitive nature of this contest versus the 2007 general election in which
Jindal won an absolute majority and defeated his nearest competitor by 37
points, 145,000 more people voted in that election than in this recent one.
Further, 2015 elections had
extraordinarily weak roll-off, or the tendency of voters increasingly to opt
out of voting the farther down the ballot they go. In 2011, which like this
year featured a competitive lieutenant governor’s race (the only one to appear
on both elections’ ballots along with governor), the gap between votes for this
office and governor was 74,000, and in 2007 (a somewhat less competitive race)
it was 58,000, but this year it was only 17,000.
The larger the gap, the greater the
interest in the governor’s contest. Higher disinterest can come from thinking
neither candidate as acceptable and opting out of the election, in believing
either candidate is acceptable and not caring who wins, or assuming one
candidate will win and thereby for some voting becomes a waste of time. With
the stark differences Edwards and his GOP runoff opponent Sen. David Vitter tried
to make between each other and his 17-point lead from the general election,
relatively lower turnout that this kind of race would suggest almost certainly
came from a combination of voters seeing neither worth voting for or they
thought before the runoff the race concluded already.
Unfortunately, the state has yet to
produce final turnout statistics by different cohorts, but the answer as to why
the governor’s race lagged in turnout relative to down-ballot items should be a
disproportionate drop in Republican turnout in the entire electorate, because
of a lack of enthusiasm for Vitter. More Republicans probably voted this
election than in 2011, but the increased totals for white Democrats and
especially blacks likely will end up proportionally higher.
In short, in 2011 because of Jindal’s
monumental win, higher roll-off, and that some typical voters in past elections
did not do so because they figured Jindal would win and supported him, that
election produced a mandate for Jindal. In 2015, even with a 12-poinit victory
margin, that did not give a mandate to Edwards as relative to the overall competitiveness
of the election it had atypically low turnout, signaling not satisfaction but
disgust with both candidates by a portion of the electorate that normally would
vote or discouragement that their vote would not matter.
You can’t have a mandate without enough
voter enthusiasm. While Democrats may try to propagandize Edwards’ election as
a mandate for his and their policy preferences, the public and policy-makers
should disregard such labelling of what in reality was an electoral
fluke that shows no majority support for the left’s agenda.
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