Of course, data sets are important. Obviously demography matters a lot. But, at heart, politics is a personal enterprise. Voters are looking for quality of leadership, character, vision and solidarity that defies quantification.
Death by Data
Over
the past decade or so, political campaigns have become more scientific.
Campaign consultants use sophisticated data to micro-target specific
demographic slices. Consultants select their ad buys more precisely
because they know which political niche is watching which TV show.
Campaigns trial test messages that push psychological buttons.
Discussion
around politics has also become more data driven. Opinion writers look
at demographic trends and argue over whether there is an emerging
Democratic majority. Pundits like me study the polling crosstabs, trying
to figure out which way Asian-Americans are trending here and
high-school-educated white women are trending there.
Unfortunately,
the whole thing has been a fiasco. As politics has gotten more
scientific, the campaigns have gotten worse, especially for the
candidates who overrely on these techniques.
That’s
because the data-driven style of politics is built on a questionable
philosophy and a set of dubious assumptions. Data-driven politics is
built on a philosophy you might call Impersonalism. This is the belief
that what matters in politics is the reaction of populations and not the
idiosyncratic judgment, moral character or creativity of individuals.
Data-driven politics assumes that demography is destiny, that the electorate is not best seen as a group of free-thinking citizens but as a collection of demographic slices. This method assumes that mobilization is more important than persuasion; that it is more important to target your likely supporters than to try to reframe debates or persuade the whole country.
This
method puts the spotlight on the reactions of voting blocs and takes
the spotlight off the individual qualities of candidates. It puts the
spotlight on messaging and takes the spotlight off product: actual
policies. It puts the spotlight on slight differences across the
socio-economic spectrum and takes the spotlight off the power of events
to reframe the whole mood and landscape. This analytic method encourages
candidates across the country to embrace the same tested, cookie-cutter
messages.
Candidates
who have overrelied on these techniques have been hurt by them. One
victim was Mitt Romney, who ran for president not as himself, but as a
thin slice of himself. Another victim was President Obama. His 2012
campaign was legendary from an analytic point of view, and, of course,
it was victorious. But it lacked a policy agenda and produced no
mandate. Without a compelling agenda, the administration has projected
an image of reactive drift and lost public confidence.
This
year, the most notorious victim of demographic politics is Senator Mark
Udall of Colorado. He’s tried to win the female votes as if all women
cared about were “women’s” issues. The Denver Post’s editorial board wrote that he’s run an “obnoxious one-issue campaign,” which is in a dead heat.
The
other victims include the Democratic senators in red states. Winning in
a state that the other party dominates is a personal enterprise. It
requires an ineffable individual connection with voters. It requires an
idiosyncratic approach to issues. By eclipsing individual quirks with
generic messages, the data-driven style deprives outnumbered candidates
of precisely what they need to survive. The Democrat Alison Lundergan
Grimes could have made a real run at Senator Mitch McConnell in Kentucky
if she’d been a little more creative.
Of
course, data sets are important. Obviously demography matters a lot.
But, at heart, politics is a personal enterprise. Voters are looking for
quality of leadership, character, vision and solidarity that defies
quantification. Candidates like Daniel Patrick Moynihan or Jerry Brown
can arouse great loyalty in ways that are impossible to predict.
In
the midst of this scuffling economy, voters are thinking as Americans
and not as members of a niche. They’re asking: What can be done to
kick-start America? They’re not asking: How can I guarantee affordable
contraception? People who are building campaigns on micro-targeting are
simply operating on the wrong level of consciousness.
The
more you look at political history, the more you see that political
imagination is the rarest and most valuable of qualities. Voters don’t
always know what they want, but they look to leaders to jump ahead of
the current moment and provide visions they haven’t thought of.
Some
politicians, like F.D.R. or Ronald Reagan, can reframe debates and
envision coalitions that don’t exist. Their visions emerge out of unique
life experiences, which are unusual but have broad appeal. They build
trust not through a few targeted messages but by fully embodying a
moment and a people. They often don’t pander to existing identities but
arouse different identities.
Today
we have a lot of technical innovation, but not a lot of political
creativity. The ecosystem no longer produces as much entrepreneurship —
mutations that fuel evolution.
Data-driven
candidates sacrifice their own souls. Instead of being inner-directed
leaders driven by their own beliefs, they become outer-directed pleasers
driven by incomplete numbers.
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