August 25, 2004

I Like Ike?

Louis Menand's timely, somewhat uncomfortable New Yorker essay on the incoherence of voter choices is recommended reading. Here he lays out the essential problem:

Three theories have arisen. The first is that electoral outcomes, as far as “the will of the people” is concerned, are essentially arbitrary. The fraction of the electorate that responds to substantive political arguments is hugely outweighed by the fraction that responds to slogans, misinformation, “fire alarms” (sensational news), “October surprises” (last-minute sensational news), random personal associations, and “gotchas.” Even when people think that they are thinking in political terms, even when they believe that they are analyzing candidates on the basis of their positions on issues, they are usually operating behind a veil of political ignorance. They simply don’t understand, as a practical matter, what it means to be “fiscally conservative,” or to have “faith in the private sector,” or to pursue an “interventionist foreign policy.” They can’t hook up positions with policies. From the point of view of democratic theory, American political history is just a random walk through a series of electoral options. Some years, things turn up red; some years, they turn up blue.

A second theory is that although people may not be working with a full deck of information and beliefs, their preferences are dictated by something, and that something is élite opinion. Political campaigns, on this theory, are essentially struggles among the élite, the fraction of a fraction of voters who have the knowledge and the ideological chops to understand the substantive differences between the candidates and to argue their policy implications. These voters communicate their preferences to the rest of the electorate by various cues, low-content phrases and images (warm colors, for instance) to which voters can relate, and these cues determine the outcome of the race. Democracies are really oligarchies with a populist face.

The third theory of democratic politics is the theory that the cues to which most voters respond are, in fact, adequate bases on which to form political preferences. People use shortcuts—the social-scientific term is “heuristics”—to reach judgments about political candidates, and, on the whole, these shortcuts are as good as the long and winding road of reading party platforms, listening to candidate debates, and all the other elements of civic duty. Voters use what Samuel Popkin, one of the proponents of this third theory, calls “low-information rationality”—in other words, gut reasoning—to reach political decisions; and this intuitive form of judgment proves a good enough substitute for its high-information counterpart in reflecting what people want.

Posted by Alan Allport at August 25, 2004 02:22 PM
Comments

That article depresses me so much I can't think of anything new to say about it.

Furthermore, this just in: Howell Raines says intelligence isn't necessarily a qualification for the presidency.

Posted by: Martha Bridegam at August 26, 2004 07:55 PM

Saw a nervous-making bumper sticker today:

"I was abducted by space aliens -- and I vote!"

Think it was a joke but lately I have trouble telling.

Posted by: Martha Bridegam at August 28, 2004 03:16 PM

This is a bit late, but I saw a sticker that's even better:

"I'm completely irrational, and I vote!"

I'd like one myself.

Posted by: Ben Brumfield at September 8, 2004 02:56 PM