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A study points out Presidential campaigns in America matter less than we think | With the US presidential campaign on, sold and scheduled are hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of television ads, while get-out-the-vote operations have been launched in towns and cities across the country. Coverage of the campaign has taken over the news media; with each new
event or drama carrying with it significant implications for which candidate will
win in November. Not true, Christopher Wlezien, professor of political science
at Temple University , said. In his new book, The Timeline of Presidential Elections:
How Campaigns do (and do not) Matter (2012), Wlezien and co-author Robert Erikson
of Columbia argue that specific events in a campaign matter much less than we
think and certainly much less than it would appear based on the media attention
they receive — not to mention the enormous amount of effort and money spent on
them. For the book, Wlezien examined data from nearly two thousand national polls
covering every presidential election from 1952 to 2008 in order to develop an
idea of how voters' preferences take shape over the course of a campaign. He found
that over the timeline of a presidential campaign the electorate’s collective
choice undergoes a slow ‘evolution’. And, he said, ‘this evolution is predictable
and based on fundamental factors, such as partisan predispositions, economic conditions
and candidate attributes’. Polls from the beginning of the year, the authors show,
rarely predict the election outcome. But, Wlezien said, a similar ‘evolution’
takes place in the last six months. Instead of resulting in dramatic change, particular
events during this period of a campaign — including debates — simply confirm voters'
inclinations. "Voters see things through their preference lenses, typically viewing
their favored candidate to be the winner of a debate," he said. According to Wlezien,
the most consequential events of the campaign are the conventions. "They focus
voters’ attention on the election and often substantially rearrange their preferences.
Most importantly, unlike other campaign events, the effects of conventions can
last to impact the Election Day outcome,” he said. “Conventions really are collections
of many events, the most important of which are the presidential candidates’ speeches.
These allow the contenders to present themselves and define their positions, and
they attract the greatest media attention and have the biggest impact on voters,"
he said. In the end, Wlezien and Ericksen conclude that it's the fundamentals
that matter — but only because of the campaigns. "Through campaigns, voters are
made aware of — or not made aware of — fundamental factors like candidates’ policy
positions that determine which ticket will get their votes," Wlezien said.
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