Elliptical orbits

Salena Zito is generally worth reading, though I'll warn you that if (like my husband) you dislike the "pithy comments from the man on the street" style of political analysis, you should skip the first half-dozen paragraphs.

Zito sees the political landscape as undergoing a tectonic shift.  First there is a long build-up of tension, as voters increasingly conclude they are being lied to by unserious people, then there is a catastrophic realignment.  The 2020 outcome perhaps depends on the resolution of a deep ambivalence in the suburbs.  Right-centrist voters long for dependability and civility, without always troubling themselves much about pure policy, but at some point they rebel against outright socialism even in its more pastel tones.

In the meantime, populist voters from both the left and right are an unpredictable disruptive force:
Democratic populists seek to copy Trump's success but not to win back the same populist voters who flipped margins by 32 points from 2012 to 2016 in places like Ashtabula, Ohio, or 18 points in Erie, Pennsylvania, both of which we profiled in "The Great Revolt." Democrats such as Warren and Sanders have given up on winning those places--and those Obama voters.
Instead, Sanders and Warren hope to emulate Trump's success with their party's version of the voters we called Perotistas, those whose participation in elections is irregular, even elliptical, and who pass into voting booths every decade or so like comets crashing into an otherwise orderly solar system, only to disappear just as abruptly.

3 comments:

Grim said...

Suburban voters who vote for socialism are voting themselves into the menu. I wonder if they understand that.

Texan99 said...

There's that word "understand" again. The voters described here are not very reflective. They're looking for a tone more than anything else. It takes extreme policies to get their attention at all, and quite immediate, obvious consequences.

In general, a government that promotes a more caring, sharing society polls very well. It's easy to think of someone else being the source of all that unwilling sharing, and that leaves us free to believe that we ourselves are already voluntarily sharing as much as even our enemies could wish.

Assistant Village Idiot said...

I think Tex is correct about the reflection, or lack thereof. They have an impression - not always an inaccurate one, but seldom very thorough - and they vote that.

A lot of people never vote, and in most cases, we should be glad of that.