It seems paradoxical — of the top five Democratic presidential candidates, Hillary Clinton is probably the most “hawkish.” Among Democratic primary voters, ending the war is the top priority. And somehow, the same voters who are staunchly opposed to the war are also backing Clinton over her Democratic rivals who seem to be more in line with the base’s thinking.
Gayle Moore, an Iowa nurse, wants U.S. troops “out, out, out” of Iraq as soon as possible. Darleen McCarthy of South Carolina fears that Iraq is turning into “another Vietnam.”
But when these two Democrats vote in January to help decide their party’s 2008 presidential nominee, neither plans to support the self-styled antiwar candidates. Instead, they are siding with the one top contender who voted to authorize the invasion and has refused to apologize for that — Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. […]
A new Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll of voters in key early primary states reveals that Moore and McCarthy are hardly alone. They represent a paradox of the race for the Democratic presidential nomination: Although a plurality of Democratic voters considers the Iraq war to be the most pressing issue facing the candidates, the more hawkish Clinton has found a sweet spot in the debate.
Remember all of those questions about whether Clinton would have to eventually apologize for her 2002 vote to authorize the war? Well, forget it; the vote no longer seems to matter.
In the LAT/Bloomberg polls in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, the strongest opponents of the war were also the strongest supporters of Clinton. How can this be?
I have a theory.
If you look at the poll results, Clinton leads among voters who want U.S. troops withdrawn “as soon as possible,” followed by Obama, and then Edwards. Among Democrats who support more gradual withdrawal plans, Clinton leads, followed by Obama, and then Edwards. Among Dems who want U.S. forces to stay in Iraq “until the war is won,” Clinton leads, followed by Obama, and then Edwards.
It leads me to suspect that the candidates’ positions on Iraq, at this point in the process, don’t matter at all. Clinton is ahead on this issue because she’s ahead overall.
Consider another poll, conducted last week, from National Journal’s Hotline, which gauged whether Democratic voters know what the candidates’ positions are on Iraq. The results showed widespread misunderstanding.
Chris Bowers notes that 59 percent of Democrats believe that John Edwards is proposing to withdraw all US forces from Iraq within nine months. 71 percent believe that Barack Obama is proposing to do this. And 76 (!) percent believe Hillary Clinton is proposing to do so. Needless to say, none of them are, in fact, proposing anything of the sort — though I wish they would.
Some Dems are really engaged in the process, some are kinda sorta paying attention, and the vast majority has only a vague sense of who’s even running. In the Hotline poll, Clinton is the most liberal on Iraq, whereas Edwards is the most conservative. Obviously, we know that’s backwards, but we’re not the norm.
But therein lies the point: we’re looking at polls and wondering how people are coming to these odd conclusions that seem to defy reason. There’s a logical explanation: reason has nothing to do with the opinions registered by the polls. Right now, Dems like Clinton and oppose the war, so they necessarily attribute their opinions about Iraq onto Clinton.
As Christopher Orr recently put it:
The Democratic electorate, which favors withdrawal, probably isn’t choosing which candidate it likes on the basis of policy positions; it’s ascribing its favored policy positions to the candidates it already likes on the basis of name recognition and other unrelated attributes. That is to say, rather than the candidates’ popularity being a function of their positions, their perceived positions are, at this point at least, a function of their popularity.
I suspect some will suggest that this is an elitist attitude — I’m accusing the majority of people of being uninformed about the details. I don’t think, however, that’s elitist; I tend to think it’s a reality bolstered by the data.
I’m open to other ideas though. Why else would ardent opponents of the war gravitate in such large numbers to Clinton?