Master of Ossus wrote:Pablo Sanchez wrote:Can you show evidence that the voters who stayed home would have voted substantively the same? The answer is no. It is impossible to prove either supposition because they didn't vote, so that there is no evidence of their attitude except to the extent they obviously didn't care.
And, yet,
polls of registered voters in the lead-up to the election showed several things that put the lie to your theory:
1. Prop 1A, and all the others, were trailing badly among likely voters, even though Democrats outnumbered Republicans in the "likely voters" category.
2. More than 70 percent of likely voters agree that defeating the ballot measures would send a message to the governor and legislators "that voters are tired of more government spending and higher taxes."
Show polls suggesting that the measures were broadly popular among registered voters who didn't show up.
Interesting article.
"That's bad news for Schwarzenegger and his allies because Republicans will play a big role in what's expected to be a low-turnout election. Democrats have a 42 to 40 percent edge over Republicans in likely voters for the special election, well below their 13-point lead among registered voters."
So Democrats outnumbered Republicans in the "likely voters" category... by 2 percent, even though they should have had a 13-point lead. That sounds like something I said earlier, something about Republicans being disproportionately interested in the results.
""Voters have been educated about what Prop. 1A is supposed to do, they just don't believe what they're being told," DiCamillo said.
That cynicism continues down the list of ballot measures, although voters are less clear about what their effects will be."
In other words, in spite of heavy advertising, the state completely failed to make voters understand what the initiatives were about, and failed to make them believe that they would fix anything. If Field's "likely voters" selection at all resembled the cross-section of voters that actually went to the polls, then we're still talking about a minority of people. Even allowing that the nays all wanted to send a message about lowering taxes and lowering spending, we're still talking about only 18% of registered voters (65% of 28%) who believed it strongly enough to get out of bed on a Saturday.
Yes. That's how unpopular these measures were. Again, they couldn't even win in LA county. What the fuck makes you think that there's a "great silent majority" in favor of higher taxes? Furthermore, it's an outright lie that only 15% of the state voted.
That would be a good point if I ever said that, which I didn't.
The
Secretary of State said that over 28% showed up. In Los Angeles County, 20% of voters voted, and nearly 70% of them opposed the budget measures.
My mistake, I looked at the "eligible" column instead of "registered" by mistake. 20% in LA County instead of 15%, for all the difference that makes.
Now you've just crossed into looney-territory. If Democratic voters didn't think the problem was serious, why would the Republicans have felt that it was?
Well, since the article you cited above apparently proved that Republicans
were disproportionately interested in the outcome, I think we can move on from here.
How the fuck do CA Republicans "want to watch the state burn?" Prove it.
They vote for CA GOP legislators, who literally were willing to hold up the budget during fire season and potentially make the state unable to pay its firefighters. So...
Note, particularly, that these oh-so-wonderful propositions that allegedly would have kept the state from burning (somehow) were written by two Republicans in the Assembly, and sponsored largely by the Governor.
One wonders if they were a serious attempt to save the budget, then. Gasp, maybe voters realized that they were being handed a cynical, heavily compromised magic trick, rather than a serious effort to fix the budget. But obviously the California Republican Party would be above floating ballot initiatives that were designed to fail, in order to make political hay.
This is a fancy way of saying, "I can't prove it at all, or even justify my beliefs, but this is what I believe!" Seriously, your entire thinking on this topic appears to be "Something seems to me to be going wrong! Quick, blame some Republicans!"
It's not like my position is without support. Look at the platform of the California Democratic party, and look at the California Legislature. If California voters believe what you think they do, why do they return huge majorities for the Democratic party, which has the opposite platform, in election after election?
More importantly, though, even among "likely voters," where Democrats outnumbered Republicans,
By 2% in a state which is heavily dominated by Democratic registrations. This alone proves that the vote was heavily skewed.
the budget initiatives were seriously unpopular in the lead-up to the election, and were actually fading in the race. Moreover, if instead of "will of the people" I had said "will of the voters," then this would make no difference to my fundamental claim that the legislature shouldn't continue to raise taxes but would destroy this entire argument that you're making about non-representative sampling.
The problem with this idea is that in actual elections more than a quarter of the people vote, so the results to which legislators actually have to pay attention are always completely different and, again, return huge majorities for the party which is most identified with more state spending. If they wanted to shrink the state budget and lower taxes, why do they never ever return a majority for the party that explicitly promises to do that?
Who cares?
Who cares is a good question, you're right that this argument is unproductive.