Did Bain Make A Difference?
The past two weeks have been enjoyable for supporters of President Obama like myself. Governor Romney has been on the defensive about his years at Bain and the Obama campaign has put out a series of effective ads. The punditocracy declared the week a win for Obama. But will it make a difference in November? Matthew Dickinson (a former professor of mine) is skeptical:
The bigger reason, however, is that most voters have already made up their mind regarding who they will support, and those that haven’t aren’t really paying close attention to Bain. According to the Times survey, 38% of those surveyed are paying “some” attention to the race, while another 14% are paying “not much” and 3% “none”.
Nate Silver’s model tends to agree:
National tracking polls moved toward President Obama, a set of state polls produced mixed but mostly unremarkable results, and the stock market was down on renewed investor concerns about Europe, lowering our economic index. Add it all up, and our model shows little change: Mr. Obama’s chances of winning the Electoral College are 67.2 percent, versus 66.7 percent on Thursday.
There are only a few moments in a campaign that make a big difference, the conventions (possibly) and the debates, and maybe a major news event or two. If an election is razor close (meaning Bush-Gore close), then controversies like Bain may make a difference. But usually the controversy of the week is just noise.
Click here for reuse options!Copyright 2012 Liberaland
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.