By Henry Olsen
Thursday, February 01, 2024
All the talk about candidates often obscures the
simple fact that elections are mainly a battle between parties. Recent shifts
in partisan voter identification suggest Republicans may be in a better
position than they have been for years.
It may surprise readers to learn that the GOP has faced
an often-significant disadvantage in baseline support despite frequently
winning national elections. Democrats surged into the lead after the Depression
and increased it throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Barry Goldwater’s landslide defeat in
1964 could have been predicted simply by looking at the Democrats’ 26-point lead in partisan ID.
That gap narrowed after Ronald Reagan’s 1984 reelection,
but Democrats still held a single-digit advantage throughout most of the last
40 years. The best the GOP could manage, once the partisan leaning of independents was factored in, were
ties or slight advantages after apparent war victories against Iraq in 1991 and
2004.
Joe Biden’s presidency, however, has changed everything.
Democratic Party identification has been steadily dropping throughout his term.
Recent data from Gallup shows that Democrats now trail Republicans by two
points, factoring in GOP-leaning independents. Moreover, Republicans held a
one-point lead in 2022, too. This is the first time since the 1930s that
Republicans have held a partisan lead for two consecutive years.
These data are even better once one looks at the nature
of the Democratic coalition. They are increasingly reliant on white,
college-educated voters and African Americans. These people are concentrated in
states that Democrats already win by large numbers, such as New York,
California, and Illinois. Trailing the GOP nationally by two points means they
surely trail by larger numbers in virtually every swing state.
That gives the eventual Republican nominee, likely Donald
Trump, a big leg up. All he must do is excite Republicans and avoid being wiped
out with true independents. We’ve seen before that Trump or his endorsees can
mess that up. But it’s always better to fight from the high ground than to
march into withering fire.
This is an unfamiliar position for the Democrats, as they
will be fighting uphill for the first time in any of their lives.
Traditionally, the Democratic partisan edge meant they could win by rallying
the base and splitting independents. Now, however, that results in a defeat.
They can win only if they rally the base and carry
independents by a significant margin.
Biden’s campaign so far shows he has no clue that the
rules have essentially changed. He remains focused on generating enthusiasm
among recalcitrant Democrats by talking about abortion and not making a deal on
the border. This keeps his party united, but it doesn’t provide independents
who are unhappy with him a reason to give him their vote.
This means his campaign is entirely reliant on making
Republicans appear to be even worse. That had some success in the midterms, as
Democrats won Senate and gubernatorial races in states where Republicans
had partisan advantages such as Arizona and Georgia. But
it will likely be a very different matter when independents need to back him
rather than simply oppose a Republican.
This doesn’t mean Republicans should rest easy. Core GOP
party identification remains low at only 27 percent. Republicans hold a
partisan lead because more independents lean toward them rather than feeling
any enthusiasm for the brand. It’s noteworthy that nine decades of history has
reversed, but history also tells us that advantages can fade quickly.
Conservatives can nonetheless look to the future with
hope. The last four years have shown many Americans what national Democrats
really want, and they don’t like it. The national media, academia, and big
business may be lined up against conservative ideas, but they are losing the
argument that matters, the one taking place between average Americans talking
with family and friends.
2024 is shaping up to be a potentially decisive election.
If Republicans can maintain their advantage and avoid antagonizing
independents, they can do more than retake the White House and Senate: They can
become the default majority party for the first time since Babe Ruth played for
the Yankees. That would be a victory for the ages and the necessary
precondition for genuinely moving the country rightward.
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