Friday, October 12, 2012

Fear and voting in America

The biggest motivator in this election isn?t enthusiasm about either of the candidates, Reich writes.?The biggest motivator is fear of the other guy.

By Robert Reich,?Guest blogger / October 10, 2012

In these September 2012 file photos, President Barack Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney both campaign in the battleground state of Ohio. Many Democrats and Republicans are motivated to vote in this election out of fear of the opponent, Reich writes.

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The latest Pew Research Center poll shows Mitt Romney ahead of President Barack Obama among likely voters, 49% to??45%. But the latest Gallup poll shows the President Obama leading Romney among likely voters, 50% to 45%.

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Robert is chancellor?s professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Clinton. Time Magazine?named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written 13 books, including ?The Work of Nations,? his latest best-seller ?Aftershock: The Next Economy and America?s Future," and a new?e-book, ?Beyond Outrage.??He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause.

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What gives? The Pew poll covered the days immediately following last Wednesday?s presidential debate. It didn?t include last weekend. The Gallup poll, by contrast, included the weekend ? after September?s jobs report showed unemployment down to 7.8 percent for the first time in more than three years.

So it?s fair to conclude the bump the President received from the jobs report bump made up for the bump Romney got from the debate. No surprise that voters care more about jobs than they do about debate performance.

But don?t be misled. The race has tightened up.

Moreover, polls of ?likely voters? are notoriously imprecise because they reflect everyone who says they?re likely to vote ? including those who hope to but won?t, as well as those who won?t but don?t want to admit it.?

Remember: The biggest party in America is neither Democrats nor Republicans. It?s the party of non-voters ? a group that outnumbers the other two.?

So the real question is which set of potential supporters is more motivated on Election Day (or via absentee ballot) to bother to vote.

The biggest motivator in this election isn?t enthusiasm about either of the candidates. The Republican base has never particularly liked Romney, and many Democrats have been disappointed in Obama.

The biggest motivator is fear of the other guy.

There?s clear reason for Democrats and Independents to fear Romney and Ryan ? their reverse Robin-Hood budgets that take from the poor and middle class and reward the rich; their determination to do away with Medicare and Medicare, as well as Dodd-Frank constraints on Wall Street, and ObamaCare; their opposition to abortion even after rape or incest, and rejection of equal marriage rights; their support for ?profiling? immigrants; and their disdain of the ?47 percent,? to name a few.

And the thought of the next Supreme Court justices being picked by someone who thinks corporations are people should strike horror in the mind of any thinking American.

Yet Romney is such a chameleon that in last Wednesday?s debate he appeared to disavow everything he?s stood for, hide many of his former positions, and even sound somewhat moderate.

Meanwhile, for four years the GOP and its auxiliaries in Fox News and yell radio have told terrible lies about our president ? charging he wasn?t born in America, he?s a socialist, he doesn?t share American values. They?ve disdained and disrespected President Obama in ways no modern president has had to endure.

They?re drummed up fear in a public battered by an economic crisis Republicans largely created, while hiding George W. Bush so we won?t be reminded. And they?ve channeled that fear toward President Obama and even to the central institutions of our democracy, casting his administration and our government as the enemy.

They?ve apparently convinced almost half of America of their lies ? including many who would suffer most under Romney and Ryan.

Republicans are well practiced in the politics of fear and the logistics the big lie. The challenge for Obama and Biden and for the rest of us over the next four weeks is to counter their fearsome lies with the truth.??

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. This post originally ran on www.robertreich.org.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/2Lw9zer2Ag4/Fear-and-voting-in-America

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