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Thursday, June 18, 2009
Michael Barone :: Townhall.com Columnist
All Politics Is Turnout -- and Enthusiasm Is Key
by Michael Barone
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Many psephologists -- derived from the word for pebbles, which the ancient Greeks used as ballots -- study who wins and loses elections. Lately, I've been looking more closely at turnout. For we live, though most psephologists haven't stopped to notice it lately, in a decade of vastly increased voter turnout.

Turnout in our presidential elections has risen from 105 million in 2000 to 122 million in 2004 and 131 million in 2008, an increase of 25 percent when population went up only 8 percent. Turnout in off-year elections has increased, too. The total vote for House elections has gone from 66 million in 1998 to 73 million in 2002 and 80 million in 2006, an increase of 20 percent.

The upswing in presidential turnout is unlike anything America has seen for many decades. To find three consecutive elections in which the percentage increase in turnout each time was larger, you have to go back to the three contests between 1928 and 1936.

There was a lot going on then that hasn't been going on now. Women, nationally enfranchised in time for the 1920 election, were still gradually entering the electorate. There was a depression on: If you don't like last month's 9.4 percent unemployment, you would really not like the 25 percent unemployment rate in 1932. In this decade, we haven't seen any large group suddenly admitted to the voting booth. Yet we have seen a bigger rise in turnout than we did in the 1960s, when Southern blacks surged into the electorate, or in 1972, when 18-year-olds could suddenly vote.

What accounts for this huge rise? One factor is the increasing polarization of our politics. We lament it, but it inspires many people to go to the polls. Another is the increasing organizational activities of the two parties. Both Republican and Democratic strategists believed, going into the 2004 election, that it was better to get your own supporters registered and to the polls than to concentrate on the dwindling number of moveable voters.

Heading into the 2008 election, Barack Obama's strategists recognized that their chances of winning hitherto dependably Republican states hinged on enlarging the electorate. They did that, brilliantly, in Indiana and Virginia, New Mexico and Nevada, and most spectacularly in North Carolina, where turnout rose 20 percent, more than in any other state, and Obama won by 1 percent.

Looking over the data, I'm moved to conclude that the factor critical to increasing turnout is the balance of enthusiasm. If your side is more enthusiastic, you'll get more volunteers, more contributions and more people taking the trouble to vote for you even without any prompting. The balance of enthusiasm seemed to favor, by a small but decisive margin, the Republicans and George W. Bush in 2002 and 2004. It seemed to favor, somewhat more strongly, the Democrats and Barack Obama in 2006 and 2008. Continued...

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About The Author
Michael Barone is a Fox News Channel contributor and co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. He is Senior Political Analyst for the Washington Examiner and a Resident Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.
 
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They told us "Polarization" was bad!
"One factor [in increasing turnout] is the increasing polarization of our politics. We lament it, but it inspires many people to go to the polls."

Excuse me?!? The "cult of moderateness" theorists & pundits have been telling Republicans that "polarization," by actually taking conservative positions on issues & disagreeing with Dems, turns off & drives away independents & undecideds. Oddly, they don't seem to be telling Dems any such thing about taking leftist socialist totalitarian positions.

So if Mike Barone is right, it would mean that bland homogenous campaigns in which nothing in particular is in play (because everyone stipulates the Democrat's positions & premises) & everybody holds hands singing "Kumbaya" on the same reservation drinking the same Kool-aid, FAILS TO INTEREST indies & undecideds?! OtoH, "polarized" campaigns in which the candidates are actually arguing & disagreeing over issues of substance, get indies & undecideds thinking & interested?

Hmmm, could it be that since maximum turnout is axiomatically good, "polarization" i.e. robust debate & a real substantive choice put in front of voters is actually a good thing? Could it be that Republicans do no one any favors by going wobbly, "moderate," "bipartisan," and failing to dispute Democrats' policies? Wow, ya don't say!

Another factor
Mr. Barone is not considering another factor - money. In 2008 wealthy, deluded backers of the radical gang around Obama poured a record amount of money into the hollow man's campaign through his uncontrolled website.
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