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Business News/ News / World/  For most US voters, presidential campaign is distant
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For most US voters, presidential campaign is distant

Since 2000, the presidential race has been competitive in states where roughly one-quarter of US voters live

With a smaller playing field in the presidential race, the candidates have tailored their pitches to a smaller slice of the electorate than ever. Photo: Jason Reed/Reuters (Jason Reed/Reuters)Premium
With a smaller playing field in the presidential race, the candidates have tailored their pitches to a smaller slice of the electorate than ever. Photo: Jason Reed/Reuters
(Jason Reed/Reuters)

Washington: This year’s presidential election could be among the closest in US history, as President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney are locked in a virtual dead heat. For a growing number of voters, however, it will not be much of a contest at all.

Roughly 22% of the US population lives in the nine politically divided states that are likely to determine the outcome of Tuesday’s election—and that have been the focus of the candidates’ campaign stops and advertising.

That has left four-fifths of Americans effectively on the sidelines, the highest proportion in more than century.

It’s a reflection of how Americans elect their president not by popular vote, but through a state-by-state process known as the Electoral College. The winner of each state typically is awarded that state’s electoral votes, with 270 electoral votes needed to clinch the White House.

Over the past four decades, presidential elections have played out on a shrinking battlefield, as political parties have become more ideologically unified and Americans increasingly have moved to communities where their neighbors share their political views, analysts say.

As a result, most states can be taken off the table—as either particularly friendly to a candidate, or not— before a presidential campaign even begins.

With the South and the Plains states firmly in the Republican column and the Northeast and West Coast solidly Democratic, elections since 2000 have come down to a few states that, for one reason or another, remain politically diverse and up for grabs.

This year, Obama and Romney focused the bulk of their television advertising and ground-level campaigning on nine states: Nevada (6 electoral votes), Colorado (9), Iowa (6), Wisconsin (10), Ohio (18), New Hampshire (4), Virginia (13), North Carolina (15) and Florida (29). Romney has made a late bid for Pennsylvania and its 20 electoral votes, but polls there have shown Obama with a consistent lead.

Some of the most competitive states, such as Virginia and Colorado, have become that way as more Democratic-leaning Hispanics and college graduates have moved in. Others such as Ohio and Iowa have been relatively untouched by demographic shifts, and the two parties have remained at a rough parity in those states.

And some states have been split down the middle.

In Wisconsin, the state capital of Madison is one of the most Democratic cities in the country, while the suburbs of Milwaukee are now among the most Republican.

Competitive presidential races in the 1960s and 1970s involved states that encompassed more than half the US population. Since 2000, the presidential race has been competitive in states where roughly one-quarter of US voters have lived.

Political analysts say the narrowed geographic scope of the presidential campaign is not just a symptom of increased polarization—it is also a reason the gap keeps widening. The dynamic encourages presidential candidates to ignore wide swaths of the nation and can make it more difficult for the winner of the election to govern effectively.

“Politics now isn’t about issues, it’s really more of a tribal affiliation," said Bill Bishop, who examined the increasing geographical polarization of the country in his 2008 book, “The Big Sort."

An ideological shift

Between the 1880s and 1960, close presidential elections were rare in the United States. Since the 1960s, Americans increasingly have moved into communities that mirror their own cultural preferences, Bishop found.

A computer programmer who wants to cycle to work and eat organic produce might move to San Francisco, while someone with the same skills who wants plenty of parking and a thriving evangelical community might choose a Dallas suburb, Bishop said.

Over the same time period, political parties have become more ideologically consistent.

While Republican voters now are much more likely than Democrats to oppose abortion, the two groups showed no difference on the issue in 1988, said Columbia University professor Andrew Gelman.

“The parties are definitely more ideological than they used to be, and the voters are, too," Gelman said.

This ideological and geographical sorting has been most pronounced at the local level, but it has played out at the state level as well, as southern conservatives have switched to the Republican Party and northeastern moderates have been pushed to the Democratic Party as Republicans have emphasized conservative stands on social issues.

As politically divided as the nation is overall, presidential races are now much less likely to be competitive at the state level.

The average state margin between the winning and losing presidential candidate in close elections widened steadily from 8 percentage points in 1960 to 14.8 percentage points in 2004, according to research by Alan Abramowitz of Emory University and Kyle Saunders of Colorado State University.

The presidential battleground as a whole has shifted during this period. Virginia, for example, had been a reliably Republican state in presidential races from the 1950s until Obama carried it in 2008.

At the same time, elections have steadily shrunk in scope.

Republican Richard Nixon campaigned in all 50 states in the 1960 campaign for the White House. He lost narrowly to Democrat John F. Kennedy, but the race was competitive in 20 states, where the margin of victory for either candidate was narrower than 5 percentage points for either candidate.

Some 18 states were competitive in the 1976 matchup between Democrat Jimmy Carter and Republican Gerald Ford. In the 2000 nail-biter between Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Al Gore, 12 states were in play. The battlefield shrunk to 10 states in Bush’s 2004 matchup against Democrat John Kerry.

The pattern is less noticeable in years in which one candidate wins handily, such as Republican Ronald Reagan’s landslide victory over Democrat Walter Mondale in 1984 or Democrat Bill Clinton’s relatively easy re-election bid over Republican Bob Dole in 1996.

Close nationally, not locally

But in close elections, the trend is clear.

The contrast is especially striking between this year’s campaign and the 1976 race, in which Carter defeated Ford by 2 percentage points.

That year, 51% of the population lived in states where Carter ended up winning or losing narrowly. New York, California and Texas were among the most competitive states for each candidate.

Those three states, which accounted for 30%of US gross domestic product in 2011, are not in play this year. New York and California are solidly Democratic, while Texas is a sure thing for Republican Romney.

The nine most competitive states this year accounted for 20% of the nation’s GDP last year.

These states are home to a smaller slice of Americans than were in play during Bush’s razor-thin win in 2000, which turned on 12 states that accounted for 27% of the population.

With a smaller playing field in the presidential race, the candidates have tailored their pitches to a smaller slice of the electorate than ever.

Obama has been emphasizing a revival in manufacturing, which could help him in Rust Belt states such as Ohio and Wisconsin. Romney’s proposal to expand the Navy seems aimed squarely at Virginia, which is home to a large naval base and military contractors that are an important part of the state’s economy.

At a time when spending cuts are needed, neither candidate has mentioned trimming the controversial federal subsidy for ethanol, which could anger corn farmers in Iowa.

This calculus can shape governing as well, said Mark Kennedy, who heads George Washington University’s graduate school of political management.

“You know which issues you’re going to be called on the mat for in the next election," he said.

As the election nears, those lucky enough to live in the “swing" states might not exactly be thrilled. The intense campaigning can widen already existing partisan divisions, and the barrage of television ads, telephone polling and door-knocking can get wearisome.

“People in Colorado are miserable because they’re getting called up all the time," Gelman said. “There’s more money and less places to spend it so it’s getting a little bit unpleasant." Reuters

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Published: 04 Nov 2012, 09:14 PM IST
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