Understanding The 2010 Midterm Election
By George E. Curry
TheDefendersOnline.com
Nov 9, 2010
Of the tsunami of mistakes made by the media in
interpreting the midterm election results, the one that rises to the top is the
assertion that Democrats lost more than 60 House seats in part because the
African-American portion of the electorate declined from 13 percent in 2008 to
10 percent on November 2.
The problem isn’t that those reports are not
technically correct – they are – but journalists and commentators were using
the wrong yardstick. Midterm election turnout is always lighter than
voting in presidential years, especially a presidential election of historic
proportion.
For example, the 63-percent turnout of eligible
voters at the polls in 2008 was the highest percentage for a presidential
contest since 1960. African Americans voted at an even higher rate than whites
– 68 percent. Therefore, comparing the 2010 off-year election to a presidential
election in which the first African American won the right to occupy the White
House is even more preposterous.
A more apt comparison would be 2006, the last
off-year election. Using that measurement, there was no drop-off in black
people going to the polls. The 10 percent share for African Americans this year
is the same proportion as 2006, the last midterm election.
Even the black share of the vote was frequently
misrepresented. For example, CBCNews.com reported, “Black voter turnout also
appears to be lower during the midterm election. An estimated 10 percent of
blacks are voting, compared to 13 percent in 2008.” Both figures represent the
black share of the overall electorate, not the percentage of African Americans
going to the polls.
“The problem was not black turnout,” said David
A. Bositis, senior research associate at the Joint Center for Political and
Economic Studies. “I’ve seen no evidence to suggest that the black vote was
down.” In fact, he said the African-American share of the electorate increased
dramatically in some states over 2006, allowing Democrats to win some highly
contested elections.
The percentage of eligible voters going to the
polls will not be known for certain until next year. If 10 percent of the
electorate is black – and that pattern holds up under further study – the
number of ballots cast by African Americans this year may be 3 percent higher
than four years ago.
The black share of the midterm electorate
increased over the last four years from 5 percent to 9 percent in California,
from 8 percent to 13 percent in Texas and from 10 percent to 20 percent in
Illinois. No exit poll figures were available for Delaware in 2006, but the
share of black voters in that state rose from 17 percent in 2008, a
presidential year, to a remarkable 22 percent in 2010, an off-year election.
Delaware is 20 percent black.
In some states, Democratic candidates lost
because of a failure to attract white votes, Bositis observed. In Ohio, for
example, the Democratic candidate for governor attracted only 38 percent of the
white vote. African Americans comprise only 10.6 of the Ohio electorate, not
nearly enough to overcome such a poor showing among white voters.
Illinois provides an interesting example of the
power of the black and Latino vote – when there is an attractive Democratic
candidate.
The party’s lackluster nominee for senate, State
Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias, was unable to prevent Rep. Mark Kirk, his
Republican challenger, from claiming Barack Obama’s old Senate seat. Giannoulis
received just 31 percent of the white vote. If he had gotten 33 percent, he
would have won the election.
Meanwhile, Democrat Pat Quinn was able to get
elected to a full term as governor of Illinois while receiving only 33 percent
of the white vote. An analysis of election data by The Chicago Reporter
showed that Quinn, who took over for impeached Gov. Rod Blagojevich, won 90
percent of the vote in the city’s 20 majority-black wards, allowing him to
narrowly defeat Republican challenger Bill Bradley.
Backed by a strong African-American and Latino
turnout, Democrats were able to sweep all statewide offices in California and
New York. “Some of these news reports don’t make any sense,” Bositis said.
“They are acting like African Americans can determine elections all by
themselves.” He said Democrats lost so many seats because a smaller share of
them went to the polls this year while there was increased turnout among
voters.
According to the Center for the Study of the
American Electorate at American University, Democrats’ share of the electorate
declined from 20.7 in 2006 to 16.0 this year. Meanwhile, Republicans upped
their share over that same period from 17.4 percent to 19.5 percent.
People of color made impressive gains across the
nation even as the GOP regained control of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Less than a year after Republican Scott Brown
won a special election to fill the unexpired senate seat of the late Ted
Kennedy, Deval Patrick, the Democratic governor of Massachusetts, was
re-elected over Republican challenger Charlie Baker. On the Republican side, in
New Mexico, Susan Martinez became the nation’s first female Latino governor.
Brian Sandoval was elected Nevada’s first Latino governor and in South
Carolina, Nikki Haley, the daughter of Indian parents, became the first female
elected governor of South Carolina. Marco Rubio, a Cuban American, won the
Senate seat in Florida.
In an extremely close race in California, San
Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris, the daughter of an African-American
man and an Indian woman, edged Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve
Cooley to become that state’s attorney general, a post held by incoming Gov.
Jerry Brown.
Two black Republicans will serve in the House,
which has been without an African-American Republican since J.C. Watts retired
in 2003. After defeating the son of former U.S. Senator Strom Thurmond, Tim
Scott will become the first black Republican to represent South Carolina in
Congress since Reconstruction. Joining him will be Allen West, the first black
Republican elected to Congress from Florida in more than 100 years. Unlike J.C.
Watts, West plans to join the Congressional Black Caucus. Scott has not
announced his intention. Alabama sent its first black female, Terri Sewell, to
Congress, replacing Artur Davis, who left office to make an unsuccessful bid to
become governor of Alabama.
With the retirement of Roland Burris of
Illinois, there will be no African Americans serving in the U.S. Senate. All
three African-American candidates – Kendrick Meek in Florida, Michael Thurmond
in Georgia and Alvin Greene, South Carolina’s mystery candidate – were defeated
in the general election.
Because Democrats have lost their majority
status in the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi [D-Calif.] has decided to run for
House minority leader. Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the House’s current
majority leader, has decided to campaign for minority whip, a position now held
by Rep. Jim Clyburn [D-S.C.], the only African American in the party’s top
leadership.
In addition to the possibility of losing the
whip position, several African Americans will also lose key committee
chairmanships: Charles Rangel [D-N.Y.] (Ways & Means), John Conyers
[D-Mich.] (Judiciary) and Bennie Thompson [D-Miss.] (Homeland Security).
As is often the case when one party wins, there
is little evidence of Republicans receiving a mandate from voters. In fact,
most of the House seats the GOP won on November 2 were previously held by Blue
Dog Democrats, who are ideologically close to Republicans on numerous issues.
They saw their ranks cut in half. So, if President Obama moves farther to the
right, as some are urging, he may be moving toward extinction.
Furthermore, House exit polls show the public is
about evenly divided between wanting Congress to reduce the deficit (39
percent) and wanting to create more jobs (37 percent), followed by those who
want cutting taxes (19 percent) to be a priority.
Exit polls show that voters are equally
disgusted with both parties, with 53 percent holding unfavorable views of
Democrats and 52 percent having a negative perception of Republicans.
According to the polls, 48 percent of
respondents want recently passed health care legislation repealed. But an equal
percentage want it expanded (31 percent) or left as is (16 percent). When
asked, “Who do you blame for economic problems,” 35 percent said Wall Street,
29 percent blamed George W. Bush and 23 percent faulted President Obama.
With voters casting ballots for different
parties over the past three election cycles, what looks like one year’s mandate
can easily turn into the next election’s eviction notice.
(George
E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News
Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be
reached through his Web site, http://www.georgecurry.com/. You can also follow him at www.twitter.com/currygeorge.)
Hear Bro. George Curry On W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio:
Concerning Our Father, Brother & Friend, Mr. Ernest Withers:Reactions From The Press...Part 3
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2010/10/07/tha-artivist-presentswe-all-be-radio
Concerning Our Father, Brother & Friend, Mr. Ernest Withers:Reactions From The Press...Part 3
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2010/10/07/tha-artivist-presentswe-all-be-radio
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