Why Democrats can鈥檛 break out of the 鈥榚lectability鈥 box
Loading...
| MIAMI
Who can beat President Donald Trump?
It鈥檚 a question endlessly asked by news outlets and analyzed by pundits. Democratic voters themselves, by a wide margin, say they would choose the candidate with the over the candidate who most mirrors their policy preferences.
As the first Democratic debates of the 2020 campaign get underway聽tonight and tomorrow, it鈥檚 likely each of the 20 candidates onstage will make a case for why they are the most 鈥渆lectable.鈥
Why We Wrote This
As Democratic candidates prepare for their first debate, the race is being framed once again around electability, a self-perpetuating concept that鈥檚 both reflective of 鈥 and has a direct impact on 鈥 their standing in polls.
Yet this focus on electability is problematic, political observers say, especially this far out in the race. The term implies that polls are predictors of outcomes, rather than what they actually are: snapshots in time. Indeed, that same predictive view of polling 鈥 and media coverage that was largely framed by it 鈥 set the stage for the shock of Mr. Trump鈥檚 victory in 2016.
More than two years later, however, the same feedback loop persists. Right now, polls place former Vice President Joe Biden . Since he鈥檚 also running ahead of Mr. Trump 鈥撀爄ncluding by big margins in key states like聽听补苍诲听聽鈥撀爉ost Democratic voters聽see him as having the best chance of beating the president. That perception works to reinforce Mr. Biden鈥檚 standing as the Democratic front-runner. And as a result, the media keep the spotlight on him, which elevates him even more.聽
According to , there have been 63,000 news articles about Mr. Biden over the past 10 weeks 鈥 far more than any other Democratic candidate (Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is next, with 27,000). And articles about the former vice president have generated the most social media interactions, such as likes, comments, and shares.聽
Washington Post media critic Margaret Sullivan calls it 鈥.鈥 Candidates who lead in the polls tend to be seen and portrayed as more formidable 鈥 which makes them more likely to continue to lead in the polls.
鈥淲e see that Joe Biden would run about two or three points better than Elizabeth Warren would against Trump, and assume that鈥檚 a hard fact,鈥 says Seth Masket, director of the Center on American Politics at the University of Denver. 鈥淏ut that position is driven by a lot of factors, especially name recognition. [And] some of that can be overcome over the course of a campaign.鈥
Consider: by the Democratic digital firm Avalanche found that if the primary were held today, most voters say they would pick Mr. Biden as the nominee. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders came in second, and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren a close third. But when asked whom they would nominate if that candidate would automatically become president, Senator Warren came in first.聽
This was supposed to be a key takeaway from 2016: Focusing on who is electable 鈥 or the equally problematic category, 鈥渓ikable鈥 鈥 is shot through with implicit biases. It鈥檚 essentially encouraging voters to judge which candidate they think other voters might like best, instead of the one they like best. And those judgments can be shaped not only by polls but by assumptions about gender, race, and other stereotypes.聽聽
鈥淲hen your model for election coverage is the horse race and you get the horse race wrong, it鈥檚 bigger than just a missed call because you鈥檝e based your entire coverage on who鈥檚 ahead, who鈥檚 going to win, what鈥檚 likely to happen,鈥 New York University journalism professor Jay Rosen Vox鈥檚 Peter Kafka in January. 鈥淭his should be a time when people in the political press are searching for all kinds of alternatives to the horse race.鈥
Mr. Rosen has suggested a 鈥溾 approach that asks voters what they want candidates to be talking about and shapes media coverage based on those answers. Buzzfeed News Editor Ben Smith, , ticked off a few other alternatives, like focusing on movement politics, or the policy differences between candidates, or the power struggles within parties.聽
Dan Kanninen, a former Obama and Clinton campaign operative who now heads the Democratic communications firm STG, says digging into the values that candidates represent is another way of reframing political coverage. 鈥淲e should be asking what campaigns are doing at their core,鈥 Mr. Kanninen says. 鈥淚s this a campaign to get people to care about a cause? What is the vision? Who is doing that effectively?鈥澛
That鈥檚 one standard for gauging candidates鈥 performances, particularly on the debate stage. The debates, after all, are held so that voters across the country can see how well candidates articulate their message and make the case that they deserve the nomination (or at least deserve to make it to the next debate).
鈥淭his is the first real chance for people who are not being seriously considered to break into discussion,鈥 says Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion. Post-debate polls 鈥渨ill help us understand whether or not a candidate has done that. That鈥檚 the best use for these debates.鈥澛
That鈥檚 almost all it makes sense to look for right now, with so many candidates 鈥 20 contenders, spread out over two nights 鈥 competing for such limited time, Mr. Miringoff says.聽
Of course, there will be other debates, and endless campaign coverage, still to come. The charge for voters, and the media, is to look beyond electability.
鈥淭his is the most consequential decision a party makes: whom it nominates for president,鈥 Professor Masket says.
As the campaign goes on and the field begins to winnow, it鈥檚 likely the media won鈥檛 focus quite as heavily on Mr. Biden and the polls, he adds. 鈥淓veryone who鈥檚 serious, when we get down to 8 or 10 candidates, will get to make their case. The cycle works that way,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut at the moment, it鈥檚 very tough.鈥