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Memo to New York Times: Political money the cause of Congressional gridlock

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  • Memo to New York Times: Political money the cause of Congressional gridlock

    This struck me as very iTulip: data-driven analysis.

    Politics are deadlocked not because people are not more divided than they used be, but rather because political money has increasingly defined and controlled the debate. (surprise!)

    ----

    Memo to New York Times: Data Shows That ‘We’ Are Not Responsible for D.C. Deadlock

    Monday, 08/15/2011 - 1:20 pm by Thomas Ferguson | One Comment Pundits should look at data, rather than mirrors, to find the real culprit behind the mess in Washington.

    After this summer’s exhausting budget and debt ceiling follies, everyone who can turn on a TV knows that Congress is sharply polarized along party lines. But most pundits are way off on what causes it. As I’ve pointed out repeatedly, too many of them miss political money’s pivotal role in creating disastrous deadlock. The evidence for this isn’t conjectural. It’s in the data for any who care to look.


    Virtually all polls, including those of organizations like CBS that poll with the New York Times, acknowledge that public support for cutting Social Security and Medicare is minuscule and that the “no new taxes” posture assumed by Republicans and some Democrats is repudiated even by most members of the Tea Party (for more polls, see here, here, and here). The public is not sharply divided on these issues. Quite the contrary.


    But on Sunday, a Times analyst once again tried to lay the blame for D.C. gridlock on the public. Brushing aside the importance of political money, Sheryl Stolberg instead recycled familiar arguments from various analysts who argue that you and I are responsible: “If Americans want to know why their elected officials can’t compromise…perhaps they ought to look in the mirror.”


    Analysts and reporters need to stop looking in mirrors and start scrutinizing data. There is little evidence that Congressional polarization is rooted in sharp differences in public sentiment.


    The most popular theory about the origins of polarization is the “cultural wars” approach. In this view, American society has fractured into warring segments over a set of “hot button” issues. Our highly polarized politics, runs the argument, just reflects deep differences over policy and ideology that now separate Americans from one another– differences that some television commentators profess to believe run deeper than at any time since the Civil War. But this just doesn’t hold up. Quite like false 1980s claims that American public opinion had shifted markedly to the right and that Ronald Reagan’s magic powers as a “Great Communicator” had established his position as the most popular American president of all time (see Ferguson and Rogers, “Right Turn” and Page and Shapiro, “The Rational Public“), this line is easily refuted by simply aligning data on public opinion over time.


    As Morris Fiorina shows in his 2009 book “Disconnect“, whether you rely on Gallup, General Social Survey, or National Election Survey data, sharp ideological shifts in American opinion are not to be found. Between 1972 and 2004, for example, even the much-touted shift in the percentage of the population styling themselves “liberal,” “conservative,” and “moderate” bounced very little. Between the 1970s and the 2000s, the “liberal” label declined slightly in popularity, but only by about 5 points. All through the period the largest category of people who expressed a preference self-identified as “moderates,” while the percentage of people thinking of themselves as extreme conservatives actually fell. As Fiorina and Abrams comment in a 2008 study: “The percentage of exact middle-of-the scale placements was 27% in 1972 and 26% in 2004″ (see “Political Polarization in the American Public” in American Political Science Review, 11, 563-589).


    Time graphs of the levels of these and similar measurements typically look like near-straight lines. If Americans were really becoming more extreme in their politics, the graphs would look quite different. To the extent any ideological change at all shows, Americans actually appear to be leaning slightly leftward. On some issues, such as same sex marriage, public opinion has moved sharply in that direction.

    Given the mass of contrary data, analysts intent on finding electoral explanations for polarization typically appeal to some version of political “sorting” notions. The idea is that even if there is no basic change in the trend of opinion, perhaps the population is somehow shoehorning itself into more homogeneous political units that then battle out their differences. The most obvious suggestion, again much touted in the media, involves the gerrymandering of legislative districts. This is a testable hypothesis. Many have tested it. The upshot is that while some stunning examples of gerrymandering for partisan advantage certainly exist, such as the lurid Texas case that led to former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay’s conviction, many counter-cases can also be found. In general, redistricting cannot possibly account for the observed degree of polarization. This actually should have been obvious all along: U.S. Senate districts have not changed at all, but the Senate exhibits about as much polarization as the House over the same period.

    Many other “sort” theories have been advanced. Everyone knows that Republican strength in the South has surged. But a substantial part of the population was more conservative there to begin with; they didn’t change much. It also turns out that the sharpest increases in polarization occurred in the north and east. Most studies of geographic polarization thus end up concluding that geography has been at best a marginal factor.

    Complicating the story by adding references to migration — of African-Americans from South to North and whites to the South — does not help much, either. The changes in each party’s regional strongholds undoubtedly bolster dominant viewpoints in each party by, for example, increasing the ranks of relative liberals in the Northeast and conservatives in the south and west. So differences between the parties should grow more distinct, right?

    Wrong. Fiorina’s points about the lack of change in Southern opinion on policy and polarization above the Mason-Dixon line remain stumbling blocks. Pointing to all the intensely partisan Republican representatives who come from the Sunbelt is not an answer, but just reframes the question.

    The one form of “sort” theory with traction actually undermines the logic of explaining political change over time through it. Studies by Fiorina and Levendusky are persuasive that individuals who hold specific “hot button” attitudes that political parties choose to highlight, such as abortion, gay rights, or stem cell research, tend to migrate toward the party championing those issues. But this research also shows that the phenomenon is miniscule — usually only a few percentage points. In reality, huge numbers of people holding hot button attitudes continue to affiliate with the “wrong” political party. Most also do not change their broader ideological label when they drift. So the overall ability of labels like “liberal” or “moderate” or “conservative” to predict positions even in most sensitive issue areas is still usually limited.

    The conclusion has to be that “sorting” was a minor part of all the sound and the fury that came with polarization; it cannot be the Archimedean lever that moved the American political world. That was political money.

    As I recently pointed out in the Financial Times, a tidal wave of political cash that emerged in the 1970s has washed away the remnants of the old seniority system in Congress, drastically changing the way that body operates. In its place, Congress now uses a system of “posted prices” for selecting who serves on committees and assumes leadership positions. Individual members of Congress compete for key slots by raising enormous amounts of money not only for themselves, but for the national congressional and senatorial campaign committees. These are controlled by Congressional party leaders. The leaders’ control of these committees, along with the vast fixed investments in research, polling, and media capabilities these committees maintain, gives them more leverage over individual Congressmen and women. It makes crossing party lines far more costly than, for example, in the nineteen fifties.

    In dividing so sharply and refusing compromises, Congress is listening primarily to those who contribute political money, not the public. As a political slogan “No new taxes” was around long before the Tea Party. It is the mantra not of the public, but of a huge swath of super-rich Americans. In an op-ed in today’s New York Times, Warren Buffett readily acknowledges this simple truth. So should reporters who purport to analyze the roots of America’s current political stalemate.

    Thomas Ferguson is Professor of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts, Boston and Senior Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute. This essay borrows from his recent paper, “Legislators Never Bowl Alone: Big Money, Mass Media, and the Polarization of Congress.”

    http://www.newdeal20.org/2011/08/15/memo-to-new-york-times-data-shows-that-we-are-not-responsible-for-dc-deadlock-55066/

  • #2
    Re: Memo to New York Times: Political money the cause of Congressional gridlock

    Cynthia Tucker, a syndicated columnist for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that also does MSNBC appearances said on 8/5 about the Iowa straw poll. "Ames is inconsequential, but it helps the media create a narrative."

    Sometimes the truth slips out.

    Analysts and reporters need to stop looking in mirrors and start scrutinizing data.
    It's far worse than that. There is something nefarious going on.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Memo to New York Times: Political money the cause of Congressional gridlock

      ....Sometimes the truth slips out.
      ...
      It's far worse than that. There is something nefarious going on.
      maybe... only somewhat likely it isnt simply incompetence by the policies/regulations (and secrataries to the assistant deputy directors), never mind the Realitie$ of trying to launch, sustain and profit (or at least exit sucessfully) from a startup/smallbiz/entreprenurial venture - this - the graph - on:

      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...906192742.html

      seems to fit with the observations made by EJ in his work?

      dunno whether its 'nefarious' or not, but the effects of prev efforts of 'intervention' as per/with the current policies, has not, as was mentioned in this one, resulted in the intended outcome?

      but this one seems fairly consistent with what eye see:

      • AUGUST 12, 2011

      The Business

      Shrinking in a Bad Economy: America's Entrepreneur Class


      Imagine a small airstrip where single-seat planes head down the runway, get 100 feet into the air and crash back to Earth, joining a heap of wreckage that grows by the day.
      You'd think this might discourage people deciding to become a pilot.
      That's a snapshot of what the recent recession did to many small businesses in America, where beneath the wreckage of failed companies lies a collection of would-be entrepreneurs. Economic funk, poor sales, tight credit, competition from new entrepreneurs abroad—all either choked existing businesses or caused aspiring entrepreneurs to hunker down and not take the leap.



      Which leads to the question: Will the damage done by the weak economy have a long-lasting effect, discouraging the next generation of entrepreneurs?
      U.S. job growth depends on small businesses, which generate about two thirds of net new jobs, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration. Start-ups fuel job growth disproportionately since by definition they are starting and growing, adding employees, says the Kauffman Foundation, which researches and advocates for entrepreneurship.
      Though there was start-up activity during and after the recession, driven partly by unemployed individuals putting out a shingle, Bureau of Labor Statistics data show the total number of "births" of new businesses declined sharply from previous years. What's more, the number of people employed by new businesses that are less than a year old—a common definition of a start-up—also declined. That trend started a decade ago.
      In a recent report on entrepreneurship, the BLS said the number of new businesses less than a year old that existed in the year ending March 2010 "was lower than any other year" since its research began in 1994. The downdraft started with the recession.
      "More people who were self-employed failed and left self-employment than people who entered," says Scott Shane, an economics professor at Case Western Reserve University who wrote a study on entrepreneurship and the recession for the Cleveland Fed. "The net effect is negative, not positive, largely because downturns hurt those in business and those thinking of entering business."



      Of course, there are plenty of hopeful stories to tell. In 2009, Audrey Todd opened Food for Good Thought, a bakery in Columbus, Ohio, after getting an SBA-backed bank loan and later some funding from state agencies. The bakery employs 11 people, including individuals with autism. And Othniel Denis used his savings this April to launch Excellent Ones Consulting, a part-time venture based in Brooklyn, N.Y., that helps companies automate administrative tasks.
      And then there's the Web-based, fast-growth, stratosphere of the start-up firmament, where entrepreneurship is red hot. Silicon Valley and tech hubs throughout the U.S. are filled with these enterprises.
      "You have a real dichotomy between the technology and Web-based economy versus the meat and potatoes economy," says Steven Kaplan, who teaches entrepreneurship at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Students at the school have lately gotten record funding from venture-capital and angel-financing groups for their tech projects. "I had two students this year, they had offers from private equity firms, and they turned down those jobs to go to work for start ups," he says. "I haven't seen that since the end of the 1990s."
      But it is in the realm of meat and potatoes that the vast bulk of the economy resides. And it isn't well.
      "If this persists—the sputtering engine of entrepreneurship—it will discourage future generations of entrepreneurs," says Robert Litan of the Kauffman Foundation.


      Dane Stangler, director of research at Kauffman, says the annual number of new "employer firms"—start-ups that employ more than just the founder—was steady for years and has drifted down since the mid 1990s. "So all of the energy that we've poured into entrepreneurship over the last 30 years"—incubators, education, special funding—"hasn't moved the needle," he says.
      He believes several developments could boost entrepreneurial spirits in coming years: the economy's push for lower-cost products and services, which start-ups could provide; a growing number of older adults, some retired, who will seek employment by starting their own firms; and the spread of Internet- and tech-based innovations into the broader economy, something he calls "a completely new infusion of energy."
      Other researchers say cultural characteristics such as individualism and a society's acceptance of business failure and recovery are the chief fuel for entrepreneurship, and that most other factors—consumer demand, financing, the cost of entry—are just cyclical.
      The U.S., which has plenty of individualism, is clearly testing that theory: Will an innate entrepreneurial spirit power up a bad economy? Or will our changing economy continue to produce fewer jobs from start-up entrepreneurship?
      For the moment, the trend lines aren't encouraging.

      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...906192742.html

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Memo to New York Times: Political money the cause of Congressional gridlock

        entrepreneurial spirit vs the power of monopolies

        odds?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Memo to New York Times: Political money the cause of Congressional gridlock

          Originally posted by don View Post
          entrepreneurial spirit vs the power of monopolies

          odds?
          what are you offering and whats the spread ?

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Memo to New York Times: Political money the cause of Congressional gridlock

            Originally posted by lektrode View Post

            This isn't surprising. 1st goes the tech bubble - which was best at this - then goes the RE bubble. No more Lycos. No more $80k/yr 1st year english major grads originating mortgages.

            Plus it's hard to take risks when you start with no assets and lots of debt. Notice the slide happened before the downturn. It seems to look a little like the inverse of this to me:

            Comment

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