There are 332 million Americans. Of that, roughly 75% are eligible to vote. Only 50% are actually registered to vote. On average between midterm and presidential elections, only 40% of the 332 million go vote. A presidential year may swing up to about 47%, and a midterm may swing down to 33%. The average is about 40%.
Of the 40% of Americans who vote, are registered to vote, and who do vote, you need 21% to win.
But of that 40%, about 13% will vote Democrat in every case and 12% will vote Republican in every case. It varies by state, but generally, the GOP and Democrats are at parity in the nation now.
That leaves 15% of Americans who really shape the election.
4% of Americans are single-issue voters. They only care about guns (gun-control vs gun rights), abortion (pro-life or pro-abortion), the environment (lean left or stay home), or other random issues and will only vote on those issues or stay home if they don’t like where any of the candidates land on the issue. On guns and abortion, the majority in each group have tended to lean to the GOP, offsetting the Democrats’ generic ballot advantage.
That leaves 11% of Americans to decide the election. Of that 11%, you have to get the votes of 5.51% of those Americans.
It is impossible in some districts and states because the percentages at the state level vary. But in swing districts and swing states, that really matters. You have to target 5.51% of the population, find them, persuade them, and hold them once you have your base locked down.
To you and me, Biden’s team seems off the rails right now. The number one issue in America is inflation, encompassing the economy, jobs, gas prices, food prices, etc. Everything else is incidental.
What is Biden doing? He is focused on a supposed climate crisis, abortion, gun control, etc. The real question is why?
The answer is not that the Biden team is incompetent at a political level. It is that they know doom is coming. They are having to mitigate the damage.
In geometry, you learn a sine wave is negated by cosine. A wave of amplitude x can be offset by a reverse wave of amplitude -x. Biden’s team is trying to grow a wave of Democrat voters to help mitigate the coming Republican wave.
Their strategy is to turn out the 15% of Americans who will always, in every circumstance, vote Democrat and also maximize the turnout of those single issue voters who care about abortion, the environment, and guns in ways Democrats care about them. Some of those neutralize each other, e.g. gun control voters vs gun rights voters. But at the margins, perhaps more pro-abortion advocates turn out over single issue pro-life voters.
The danger here is that this further alienates non-white Democrats and those voters continue their shift to the GOP. But if the Democrats want to do their best not to cancel the GOP’s wave but reduce its impact, they need to pull in as many Democrat and single-issue left-leaning voters as possible.
What you and I see as nuts for them abandoning inflation and the economy as the big issue is actually smart politics when they know doom is coming and they want to ensure the GOP only wins 20 seats in the House, not 40, and the GOP wins the Senate by 1 seat, not 5.
The behavior of the White House and Democrats is a tacit admission that the GOP wave really is coming and really is big, and their strategy is to reduce its size and scope, not actually stop it from happening at all.
This is spot on and what I have been telling my friends for weeks. Dems can ignore the economy because they have already lost as many voters as they will on that issue. Their best strategy going forward is to try to hold or attract voters that put other issues at the top of their priorities.
And Republicans seem content to try to ride into power on the economy alone, and they are missing a real opportunity to really grow. This is the time to have a platform that talks about immigration, healthcare, and reforming social security. An agenda that shows Americans the GOP is capable of governing.
Umm, let's be a little careful with our geometric analogies. Cosine does not cancel out sine per se...
Sine and cosine are not opposite of one another, they are 90 degree shifted in time. While part of a cosine does, in fact, reduce the amplitude of the sine during the cycle, the other part of the cycle, cosine actually adds to the sine to create bigger peaks and deeper valleys 45 degrees shifted either.
https://www.chegg.com/homework-help/questions-and-answers/addition-sine-cosine-consider-following-x-sin-x-g-x-cost-h-x-f-x-g-x-graphs-three-function-q35307813
The analogy Erick uses is true for part of the cycle, actually accentuates the problem the other part of the cycle.
That said, if one adds a sine and an arcsine, one truly does cancel out the other ;-)
Just being nerdy...