Los Angeles Times

Great unknowns of the 2016 race

Five questions could determine who wins the presidency.

- By David Lauter david.lauter@latimes.com Twitter: @David Lauter

WASHINGTON — Anyone who confidentl­y predicts the outcome of this year’s presidenti­al race is either not serious or seriously delusional.

Particular­ly on the Republican side, the number of plausible scenarios outstrips anyone’s ability to forecast. But we can highlight five of the key unknowns.

How will Donald Trump respond to losing?

Rarely does a candidate run the table in the primaries. Except for incumbent presidents seeking a second term, almost every candidate loses somewhere.

For Trump, that first loss could come early. In Iowa, which on Feb. 1 holds the first contest of the nominating race, Trump has trailed Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas in most polls for the last month.

Losing stings any politician, but for Trump, who brags so much about his standing in polls and has built his image so thoroughly around being a “winner,” the effect could be particular­ly harsh.

Does he bounce back from a loss or does it send his campaign into a downward spiral? Does he begin to spend large amounts of his own money? Do his supporters, many of whom are already alienated from politics, grow discourage­d if they see him defeated?

Does turnout go up?

Even in hotly contested years, only a fraction of voters take part in primary elections.

Iowa, for example, has nearly 2.1 million registered voters. In 2012, in a fiercely contested Republican race, only a bit more than 121,000 turned out for the party caucuses. That was slightly fewer than one-fifth of the GOP’s registered voters.

That’s about average for both parties. In 2008, however, then-Sen. Barack Obama’s campaign broke the pattern, organizing tens of thousands of first-time caucus-goers, getting them to show up on a frigid evening and boosting turnout to almost 4 in 10 Democrats.

Can any of this year’s candidates pull off a similar feat, either in Iowa or other early voting states?

Sen. Bernie Sanders’ hopes for pulling off an upset victory over Hillary Clinton depend on that. Trump’s chances may also go up if turnout rises; many of his supporters are not traditiona­l primary voters.

But so far, pollsters who have done well at predicting turnout in the past, such as J. Ann Selzer, whose surveys have long been the gold standard for polling in Iowa, say they don’t see signs of a wave of new voters.

Where can Marco Rubio break through?

His admirers often refer to the junior senator from Florida as a potential “transforma­tional” candidate: one who could change the Republican Party’s image with voters, much as Bill Clinton did for Democrats in 1992.

First, however, Rubio would have to win the nomination, and for all his skill as a politician, the path to that goal has proved elusive.

Trump has changed the dynamics of the Republican race in a way that hasn’t helped Rubio. At the same time, Cruz has consolidat­ed support among the most conservati­ve Republican­s, forcing Rubio to compete in a scrum of candidates seeking more moderate voters.

Rubio’s aides insist that all is well. Support for their candidate will crest at just the right time, they say.

So long as no one candidate sweeps the early contests, Rubio could still emerge the winner because he is the candidate who is most acceptable to the broadest swath of the party’s voters as well as its influentia­l big donors.

But winning the nomination without coming in first in any early state is tough.

Rubio almost certainly needs to win the primary in his home state, Florida, on March 15. But to do that, he’ll probably need to score some other victories first.

Rubio’s strategist­s once made confident prediction­s about South Carolina as their breakout state. Aides now point to Nevada. If Cruz’s lead persists in Iowa, he, and whoever wins New Hampshire, will pose a major obstacle to Rubio in both those states.

What about that FBI investigat­ion into Clinton’s emails?

So far, Sanders has not shown an ability to defeat Clinton. He has raised a lot of money — $33 million in the final three months of 2015, almost as much as Clinton — and has more than a million small donors, but Clinton continues to command the support of a large majority of Democrats and leads in polls of all the early primary states except New Hampshire.

But the email issue continues to cast a shadow.

Law enforcemen­t officials have said Clinton is not a target of their investigat­ion. They say they are seeking to determine whether people who worked for her at the State Department mishandled classified informatio­n in several emails they sent her.

Still, investigat­ions can take sudden turns, and as long as this one continues, its outcome will remain a big question mark over the 2016 race.

Will demographi­cs outweigh the desire for change?

Pay no attention to polls of hypothetic­al general election matchups; they’re mostly meaningles­s right now. Almost regardless of who wins the GOP nomination, the 2016 general election seems likely to be close.

After eight years of George W. Bush and eight more of Obama, the country remains nearly evenly divided between Democrats and Republican­s, and the gap between the two parties has widened.

Young versus old, minority versus white, secular versus religious, liberal versus conservati­ve, urban versus rural — all these splits in American society have come to coincide with the partisan division.

The number of Americans who shift back and forth between parties has fallen to a low ebb, and partisan polarizati­on has not been so strong for a century.

Perhaps if Trump becomes the GOP nominee, or if he runs as a third-party candidate, that dynamic will change. But other than that, the likelihood is strong that the 2016 election, like the contests in 2008 and 2012, will come down to a relative handful of voters in a small number of states, including Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, Ohio, Colorado, Nevada and perhaps a few others.

How much will black voter turnout fall without the country’s first black president on the ballot? Will Latino voters show up in greater numbers? Will Clinton, if she wins the Democratic nomination, expand the Democrats’ usual lead among women?

Or will fatigue with the party in power swing a few key states to the opposition, as has happened before after two-term presidenci­es? Those questions in the end will probably matter more to the outcome than all the headlines between now and election day.

 ?? Spencer Platt
Getty Images ?? REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE Donald Trump could face his first defeat in Iowa. Would he bounce back or would a loss send his campaign into a downward spiral?
Spencer Platt Getty Images REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE Donald Trump could face his first defeat in Iowa. Would he bounce back or would a loss send his campaign into a downward spiral?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States