They won the Presidency in '76 and controlled Congress aside from some periods in the Senate up until '94 and then won the White House in '92. I disagree with your analysis.
The Democrats definitely weren’t great at winning elections for the White House from 1968-1992, but I think I disagree with how you characterize their overall situation.
I’ll agree that a lengthy primary fight doesn’t necessarily mean anything in the general election. I do see a difference between 2008 and 2012, though.
In 2008, it was fairly certain that we would have either our first woman President or our first black one. It was a nail-biter throughout, and whichever of them had won the nomination would have gone into the general with a united party and with a campaign and a team that was already battle-tested and blooded against the best competition the party had to offer.
This year, Romney is generally accepted as the default Republican nominee, and it’s a certainty that he will win the nomination. He’s going to go into the general election with a campaign and a team that couldn’t put away The Three Stooges by Super Tuesday. His party won’t be united, and his campaign and his team have demonstrated an astonishing level of incompetence.
I remember reading that no president has been ousted during a war that they initiated. Google didn’t offer any support for that claim though, so I’ll have to rely on someone else’s historical knowledge on that…
War of 1812 - Madison - war declared in June; re-elected in November
Mexican War - Polk - war was over by the end of his term
Civil War - Lincoln - didn’t initiate war; war started in 1861; re-elected in 1864
Spanish-American War - McKinley - opposed war; war was over before he was re-elected
World War I - Wilson - initiated war during his second term; war was over before end of that term
World War II - Roosevelt - didn’t initiate war; war started in 1941; re-elected in 1944
Korean War - Truman - didn’t initiate war; didn’t run for re-election in 1952, partly due to ongoing Korean War
Vietnam War - Eisenhower/Kennedy/Johnson? - hard to say who was the President who initiated American involvement the war; all three enlarged the war; Eisenhower was re-elected; Kennedy died in office; Johnson was re-elected in 1964 but didn’t run for re-election in 1968, mostly due to the ongoing war
Gulf War - Bush - war was over by the end of his term
Panama War - Bush - war was over by the end of his term
Afghanistan War - Bush - didn’t initiate war; war started in 2001; re-elected in 2004
Iraq War - Bush - initiated war in 2003; re-elected in 2004
I left out minor wars (although some would argue Panama was a minor war).
I’d say the main counter-argument to the idea was Johnson. He turned what was a minor war in Vietnam into a major war for the United States. And he left office mainly due to that war.
This times 10. There is no appetite for another ground war among the general population. Military action to permanently destroy Iran’s nuclear capability would certainly require a greater commitment of personal and materiel than Libya did.
He was steadily gaining traction after New Hampshire. If New Hampshire had been held slightly later, Huntsman might have gotten second and give Romney only a narrow win.
Or second. Alabama and Mississippi are the closest states to Georgia and South Carolina currently in play and if he can’t win there, Gingrich cannot win anywhere.
Not happening. Conservatives (even extremnists) generally do not engage in riots-right-wing extremnist violence have been by lone-wolfs.
OTOH, any Republican candidate (except Ron Paul who will not be the nominee) is going to be even more aggressive on Iran (ie if Obama supports airstrikes, Romney or Santorum is going to be pushing for a massive invasion). Actually if Iran becomes the major issue I might even move from grudging Romney supporter to tolerating Obama as the least worst choice (depending on how I think Romney will really act as opposed to the rhetoric) although I’d tell people to write-in somebody else…
The odds of a Romney November victory are somewhere between 30 and 60 percent. Anywhere in that span are not bad odds. If you don’t toss your hat in the ring your chances are zero. I use intrade as a rough way of placing current odds: again, anybody who thinks Romney’s chances are 5-10% can make a killing at Intrade. They only need to put their money where their mouth is.
Less mathematically, it’s a long time till November. GWBush’s odds looked excellent in Jan 1991. In Nov 1992, not so much.
Incumbency is worth about 2.75 points in the popular vote. That’s a lot. But it’s not insurmountable as Clinton and Reagan can attest. Especially when there’s a decent chance of economic collapse during the election year.
Martin. We’re here to fight ignorance. That means if you argue “A”, I’m not obliged to argue “Not A”. You said McCain wasn’t a dreg. I agree: if he was a dreg (or if Obama’s oratory was electorally hypnotic as some conservatives like to claim) Obama would beat the Fair model by something like 4 points, rather than a merely respectable 1.5. The model only tells you relative performances in various matchups though. My take is that Obama is a solid but not particularly strong campaigner and that choosing Palin should have disqualified McCain electorally. It did not.
Dukkakis: now that man was a dreg.
It’s impressive when you modify your variables (modestly) once in a 25 year period. That helps combat concerns with data-dredging. You are correct to distinguish between within sample and out of sample forecasts. I wasn’t aware that they are all that different though, and I can’t locate the 1992 and 1996 out of sample forecasts. I can say though that 1992 was a bad year, due to Perot’s intervention. Third party runs mess up the model because we don’t have enough data on such experiences.
Hm. Well, Nate Silver certainly doesn’t take that approach. And Fair’s point is primarily about noting that the economy matters much more than other factors which a babbled about by our nation’s pundits. If you want to predict electoral outcomes, I understand that approval ratings are an invaluable component, which Fair doesn’t use for endogeneity reasons. [Elaboration on request.]
Numbers 2 and 3 don’t apply to the Fair model.
The average spread in the popular vote is 5.6 points. The median spread is 4.9 points. 1916-2008. Admittedly, the spreads have declined in recent years: the median spread from 1972-now was 3.7. That’s not small: a typical error in the model of 2.1 or less won’t make a difference usually. A bigger error might.