Presented
with a quandary about whether to support their party in this year’s
gubernatorial contest, Democrats are responding in a way forecasting that if
the front-runner doesn’t win there won’t be a Democrat winner either in 2015.
Previous polls made Republican Sen.
David Vitter the favorite, followed
not too far away by Democrat state Rep. John Bel Edwards, with Republican
Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne somewhat
farther back, and Republican Public Service Commissioner Scott Angelle lagging the field in the
single digits. The most
recent of the bunch confirmed this pecking order but gave Vitter a larger
lead at 38 percent, with Edwards at 25 percent falling back towards Dardenne’s
16 percent, and Angelle still dragging the rear considerably with 5 percent.
Those older ones raised some questions
about their sampling frames and the relatively low number of undecided votes.
This one, by Southern Media and Opinion Research, had a better sampling frame
and came up with roughly the same proportion undecided. Given that it happened
two months later, that roughly equivalent proportion appears more reasonably
valid and thereby shows a firming of support driven not so much by party label
and name recognition.
It also may foretell the answer
Democrats could supply regarding their role in this race. The quandary Democrats
face is that Edwards simply cannot win, as the numbers reiterated here increasingly
bear out, meaning perhaps they should cut their losses by supporting the most “acceptable”
Republican. By these numbers, the majority of his support is non-white voters
and, even in a runoff, he would not pull more than a quarter of the white vote.
That gives him a ceiling of 45 percent against any opponent.
Of course, anything can happen in a
contest and you can’t win if you don’t play. But the dynamics behind these
numbers suggest that unless Democrats do decide to vote tactically for either
of Dardenne or Angelle, Vitter wins. While pundits love to point out that
within the past half-century of Louisiana gubernatorial races several times presumed
favorites never gained traction and guys from the back of the pack surged to
win, so far this contest shows none of these qualities. The likes of former
House Speaker Hunt Downer and former Govs. Jimmie
Davis and (twice) Buddy
Roemer never held large leads and as high numbers as early and as
consistently as Vitter now does (although polling was a bit sketchy concerning elections
towards the beginning of this period). He appears unlikely to fade nor does
anyone else seem likely to approach his numbers, even if (with the four
projected candidates running) he does require a runoff to win.
So, if Democrats consider Vitter
the most objectionable in the field, and they understand the limited upside of
Edwards, they need to start gravitating towards Dardenne or Angelle, with the numbers
suggesting that some already have abandoned Edwards in favor of Dardenne, both
in terms of their relative polling movements and in that whites
disproportionately make up the undecided vote. Concerning the latter aspect, some
number of these whites may have sympathy for Edwards but can’t decide whether
to stick with him as the best opponent to Vitter; the state’s senior senator
has had a long and controversial career by which to polarize the electorate, so
likely few within it have not formed an opinion about whether he’s their man or
there’s no way they’d vote for him, and it’s only the latter category included
among the undecided.
Given his larger critical mass of
support, Dardenne could be the beneficiary of tactical voting among Democrats
(even as he is a lifelong Republican officeholder, whereas Angelle was a
Democrat until a few years ago). That could accelerate if Angelle, who has
spent a lot to gain little, drops out, as most of his votes probably would end
up in Dardenne’s camp, creating further incentive for tactical voting.
Future polling will verify, but it
appears already some Democrats among voters polled have conceded the governor’s
office, and as long as Edwards appears to make no headway or to lose more
ground in subsequent surveys, at some point expect his deterioration to
accelerate.
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