Last week on my radio show Representative Mike Pence (R-IN) discussed
the Fairness Doctrine, an important issue currently being debated in
Congress. During the show Representative Pence mentioned that he and
other Members of Congress were nervously awaiting my election
predictions.
With little more than a year remaining before the next presidential
election, I have some ideas about who will win and who will lose. My
record to date has been remarkably accurate.
Years ago I believed that there was a silent majority in electoral
politics. Thus, right before the 1964 election I disregarded all of the
polls and instead let my heart speak. I truly believed that the silent
majority would win and Barry Goldwater would be elected. Election night
of 1964 quickly disabused me of this belief. I had the displeasure of
reporting that all of my friends in Congress who were up for re-election
had been defeated.
I vowed I would never have such an experience again. I had been too
emotionally involved to make accurate predictions so close to Election
Day. Instead I began making predictions a year prior to the election.
This has worked well ever since.
In 1967 I predicted that former Vice President Richard M. Nixon would be
the Republican nominee for President and then-Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey would be the Democratic nominee. There was talk of Governor
George Wallace of Alabama running as a third-party nominee, which he
did. Once Nixon and Humphrey received their respective parties'
nominations, my prediction was that Nixon would win the presidency in a
landslide. Nixon did win, but I had to stay up until 5:00 AM EST to hear
the official announcement. Humphrey nearly beat him. The election was so
close in part because of Wallace. He carried five states and took many
votes from Nixon.
In 1971 I had no idea that George S. McGovern would be the Democratic
nominee for President. I was sure of one thing: President Nixon would
win re-election. I was correct.
Four years later Gerald R. Ford was President. He had pardoned Nixon in
1974, a pardon that proved controversial. At that point, I had not heard
of Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter. However, it was clear that a Democrat
would win control of the White House. That proved to be true.
By 1979 Carter was unpopular. Many pollsters said a one-term president
would not be defeated. I believed otherwise, but I thought former Texas
Governor John B. Connally, Jr. would be the Republican nominee. This was
not the case, but I predicted the Republicans would win in 1980 and they
did.
In 1987 President Ronald W. Reagan was immensely popular. I thought Jack
F. Kemp, Jr. might be chosen as the Republican nominee to succeed
President Reagan. Had I analyzed the process in greater detail, I would
have realized that the Republicans would choose the Vice President,
George H. W. Bush. He had been loyal to the Party on nearly everything,
or at least voters perceived so. The mood was such that it mattered
little who the Democrats chose for their candidate.
Bush lost his chance to be re-elected when he raised taxes. Voters who
knew little about him remembered his quote: "Read my lips: no new
taxes." I thought Bush would lose and I was correct. Continued... |