Houston Chronicle Sunday

Democrats counted too heavily on ‘Trump fatigue’

- By Stephen L. Carter

In trying to figure out how former Vice President Joe Biden’s expected landslide turned into a grim, nail-biting election, we should take a lesson from social science and consider how the problem of moral hazard may have hurt the Democratic Party’s efforts.

The term moral hazard refers to the way that people tend to become less risk averse when they know they are protected from the consequenc­es of their folly. The textbook example is the well-documented tendency of insured drivers to be less safe on the road, because they will not bear the full cost of any accidents.

This year, the Democrats assumed that the details didn’t matter much because they could build a majority principall­y through an appeal to those who were so fed up with President Donald Trump that nothing would stop them from voting against him. This conception of the electorate in turn led to the reckless driving: the evident belief by many in the party that there was little risk in adopting public stances that in another year voters would find troubling, because “Trump fatigue” would carry the ticket to victory.

The view that animosity would carry the day was not entirely wrong. According to Morning Consult, some 44 percent of Biden voters said they were voting more against the other candidate than for their own, compared with only 22 percent of Trump voters. But the very fact that the strategy partly succeeded is a reminder of the risks in translatin­g a narrow victory into a program of governance. When so large a chunk of your coalition hated the other guy, you lack a reliable basis for assuming that they’re with you on the issues. Treating them as solid supporters and proceeding with an agenda that might wind up alienating them is a textbook example of moral hazard.

To see why, let’s begin with a quick a trip down ballot, where the Democratic blue wave shattered on the boulders of human complexity.

Politico reports that angry party centrists are blaming a combinatio­n of the leadership’s smugness in imagining that an anti-Trump message would be suffi

cient to win the day, as well as the inability of candidates in tough races to escape the taint of the left wing: “Moderates in Trump-leaning districts couldn’t escape their ‘socialist’ shadow.” Stephanie Murphy, head of the party’s Blue Dog caucus, was frank about the cause of the party’s difficulti­es: “That far-left agenda is not what wins districts and holds majorities.”

The tendency of the voices of the party’s left wing to drown out Biden’s centrist appeals had a cost. Consider, for example, the way that the heavily Hispanic counties in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, in recent presidenti­al years a Democratic stronghold, went decisively for Trump. How

could this have happened? Interviewe­d by NPR, Domingo Garcia, head of the League of United Latin American Citizens, pointed out that a large number of Border Patrol agents are Hispanic: “So when you are talking about defunding the police, and you don’t stand up to those types of rhetoric, then it leaves an opening for Republican­s to come in and take advantage of that.”

No bloc voting

In this sense, the rise of identity politics created a moral hazard of its own, leaving the party with a false sense that ethnic groups have common interests that lead their members to vote as a bloc. There’s limited truth to this contention, and this year the limits became apparent. The Democrats seemed to assume

that their portrayal of Trump as irredeemab­ly racist would suffice to win them the support they needed among nonwhites. But apparently not every voter in that group was persuaded; at the very least, many found other issues more salient. And whiteness was less important this time around. Preliminar­y exit polls tell us that Trump actually lost considerab­le ground among white men. At the same time, he made significan­t gains among people of color, both those with college degrees and those without.

Similarly, despite Trump’s well-documented history of misogynist­ic comments, he and Biden essentiall­y tied among white women with college degrees, compared with a 7-percentage-point advantage enjoyed by Hillary Clinton in 2016. At the

same time, Trump lost among white men with college degrees, a group where he trounced Clinton four years ago.

Issues over character

All of which brings us to the single most important lesson of the exit polling: While Democrats won easily among voters who considered the candidate’s “personal qualities” the most important factor, voters who prioritize­d the candidate’s position on the issues over character leaned Republican.

And there were a lot more of the latter — 73 percent vs 23 percent.

A significan­t fraction of voters care about policy, and were even willing to support an incumbent they probably don’t much like because they liked his policies; whereas the Democrats’ effort to make a policy case could hardly be heard amidst the storm of anti-Trump sentiment.

Thus we see the costs of moral hazard. Yes, the Democrats’ gamble on animosity succeeded, but only by the narrowest possible margin. Down ballot, the gamble led to trouble. The party behaved this year like an overconfid­ent driver whose nonchalanc­e leads him right into an accident … from which, by the grace of God, he emerges with only a few scrapes.

What one hopes is that next time around, the driver will pay more attention to what’s actually in the road.

 ?? Ana Ramirez / Tribune News Service ?? Mike Guevara, a GOP candidate for the Texas House inWilliams­on County, speaks during an Oct. 24 car rally in support of President Donald Trump in Cedar Park.
Ana Ramirez / Tribune News Service Mike Guevara, a GOP candidate for the Texas House inWilliams­on County, speaks during an Oct. 24 car rally in support of President Donald Trump in Cedar Park.

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