My very first paid job in politics was in 1996, when I helped run a congressional campaign in York, Pennsylvania (yes, the birthplace of York Peppermint Patties). We had a great candidate, a solid message, and no money, running in a district that hadn’t seriously considered a Democrat for Congress in a generation or two. The results weren’t encouraging.
While I was there, though, I learned a bit about voters in south-central Pennsylvania. They are, to put it mildly, a conservative bunch. And those were the Democrats.
With that in mind, I was fascinated to read about a focus group, organized by the Annenberg School at the University of Pennsylvania, held last night in York with 12 likely voters, none of whom had supported Barack Obama or John McCain in the Pennsylvania primary in early April.
A focus group conducted last night here in a county that Hillary Clinton carried in April showed that her supporters are coming around to Obama. But the group — 12 likely voters, all white, and all of whom didn’t back either Obama or McCain in the primary — also demonstrated that both candidates have plenty of work to do between now and November. The good news for Obama: Of the seven Clinton supporters, all of whom backed her strongly, five were solidly behind the Illinois senator, one was fiercely opposed (“I don’t trust Obama,” he said), and one was undecided (but noted that Clinton’s support of Obama would influence her vote).
The bad news: On some questions of character, patriotism, and values (who would you rather carry the American flag at the Olympics, who would you rather carpool with), the focus group overwhelmingly picked McCain. While Jeremiah Wright barely came up and “bitter” didn’t at all, two of the respondents — the Clinton supporter and a female Bush voter — had very negative opinions of him. “I don’t trust Osama … Obama. It’s only a letter difference,” said Charles, the Hillary backer. “His middle name is Hussein.” Observed Terry, the female Bush voter: “I don’t feel he’s a true American.”
Some of those comments are, of course, pretty offensive, and more than a little ridiculous, but not especially surprising given the politics of the area.
What is surprising, though, is that of those 12 white voters in a conservative part of the state, not one of whom voted for Obama in April, a plurality (five) planned to vote for the Democrat. Four preferred McCain, and three were undecided.
I find this oddly encouraging — these voters are suspicious of Obama, but they’re either planning to or open to voting for him anyway. MSNBC said this was “striking.”
How’d this happen?
Democratic pollster Peter Hart, who conducted the focus group for the Annenberg School at the University of Pennsylvania, said Obama benefited from a room wanting change and to move beyond Bush. What skeptics were looking for, he added, was some “meat on the bone.” The five who said they would vote for him cited his fresh ideas, intelligence, grasp of the issues, and excitement and energy. The four who opposed him — all Bush voters, save Charles, the Hillary supporter — stressed his inexperience and their fears of him being commander-in-chief. And of the three who were undecided, one said they wanted to know more about his health-care plans; another wanted to know more about the kind of change he would bring; and the third said she was considering Obama because of change.
All things being equal, the Obama campaign should find this quite encouraging. Those looking for more “meat on the bone” will get plenty of information in the coming months, as will those undecided voters looking to learn more. That’s what general elections are for.
And what of McCain?
[M]any of the focus group participants cited his experience, his POW past, and his love of the country. But it was noteworthy that of the three undecideds, all of them voted for Bush in 2004 — but they were unwilling to announce their support for McCain. One of them, Kim, expressed concern about the Arizona senator’s age. Another, Janell, even recalled him saying at a GOP debate that the economy wasn’t in that bad of shape, and she said that McCain must chose a running mate “I have absolute confidence in” to win her vote. Hart said the fact that a GOP voter like Janell wasn’t supporting McCain right now was telling. “If [she] isn’t a locked-in vote for John McCain, that is bad news.”
Given what I know of York, I’m pleasantly surprised.