Ground game: Obama’s voter registration drive and the NRA mailer

If the election shifts enough in the coming weeks for one of the two candidates to win by a decisive national margin, it is unlikely that the ground game, electoral map and the campaigns’ careful strategic planning will matter much. But if the election remains as close as it looks to be today, investments at the micro level could very well determine the result. And this is one area in which Barack Obama retains an advantage.

But this is not the type of edge that pollsters can pick up on, making any number we can find that much more precious. Most of the data we have seen up to now has looked at shifts in voter’s party affiliations. That tells us how many more (or less) voters are registered as Democrats or Republicans, but not much about new voters, as much of these partisan shifts are due to already-registered voters changing their affiliation. These new voters are one of the key weapons of the Obama campaign, and one of the reasons he won the Democratic nomination (for instance, his influx of new voters overwhelmed Clinton and Edwards’s caucus organization on January 3rd).

Now, Time provides us this very useful table of voters who have newly registered from January to July 2008, and the numbers are very encouraging for the Obama campaign. More than 3 million voters registered in that period, and while a lot of them are not Democrats, Time’s table shows that these new voters are registering as Democrats at much higher than normal proportion; also, a disproportionate number of new registrants are under 35, Obama’s strongest demographic group.

The most impressive numbers come from Florida (441,225 new voters, 45% of which are Democrats and half of which are under 35), Michigan (where 63% of the 411,207 new voters are under 35), North Carolina (429,059 new voters, 49% of which are Democrats and 55% of which are under 35), Pennsylvania (where an outstanding 67% of the 286,255 new voters are Democrats and 69% are under 35). Remarkable numbers as well out of Nevada (where 110,124 new voters is a lot considering the state’s size, especially as 53% of them are new voters) and Ohio (65% of the 255,587 new voters are under 35).

In some of these states, a lot of work was done during the primary season. In others, these gains are due to Obama’s general election effort. And Democrats should feel even better that these numbers only cover the period ending in July. The campaign is sure to continue voting overtime until the registration deadlines start coming up in late September/early October; in other words, the final numbers are likely to be much higher than this.

Of course, registering new voters is only the first step - getting them to the polls requires a whole other round of effort. As the New York Times reported today, this is where early voting comes in - and we will have to keep track of any data from that department once the first states open their ballots at the end of this month.

One obstacle to all of this will come in the form of legal challenges. A month ago, the GOP signaled it was sending teams of lawyers to key battleground states to review voter registration applications and issue challenges. Now, Florida election authorities are saying they will start enforcing a voter ID law that was on hold pending legal review for the past year. This law (read the details here) could lead to a lot of new voters being forced to cast provisional ballots on Election Day; they would have two days to prove their identity. If the election comes down to a small margin in FL, expect a huge legal battle. (In other news from Florida, the Obama campaign seems to be aware of its relative weakness among the Jewish community and is organizing very extensive outreach among the community.)

Meanwhile, McCain supporters are also increasing their ground game. Today marked the NRA’s first move in the presidential race, and they made sure to make a splash by producing a brochure that warns that Obama would be “the most anti-gun president in American history.”

The brochure contains a lot of text and tells voters not to believe Barack Obama - contrasting what he says and what he does: “He has supported bans on handguns and semi-automatic firearms, and he has voted to ban possession of many shotguns and rifles commonly used by hunters and sportsmen across America. And we will remind voters every single time he lies.”

They will print 6 million brochures, and it will reach at least 4 million NRA member. Of course, this is not a surprise - the NRA targeted John Kerry four years - but it is a reminder that this is one of more obstacle Obama has to overcome to address his weakness among culturally conservative white voters, whether Reagan Democrats or independents (remember that today’s CNN poll found Obama trailing by 18% in the Detroit suburbs).

5 Responses to “Ground game: Obama’s voter registration drive and the NRA mailer”


  1. 1 Andy

    As for the ground game–Obama opened up his Nebraska HQ in Omaha today and they started canvassing here in the 2nd CD two weeks ago. I stopped by the opening ceremony expecting maybe 100 people. To my surprise, the place was packed. Mike Fahey gave a speech and Scott Kleeb (much taller than I thought he was) made an appearance. Anyway, these people are going to be canvassing all over the district and it seems like the organized effort is really there. While it still seems like a reach to put a district that went for Bush by 20 percent in play, we should also note that Lee Terry got only 55% against a then unknown opponent who had almost no media presence (I think he ran one ad in the last week of the cycle). If Obama can tap the substantial minority vote in the city of Omaha with a strong ground game and appeal to the suburbanites he’s done well with at times, this one electoral vote could be up in the air.

    Or maybe I’m just a wishful thinking left-leaner in deep red country.

  2. 2 Coco

    Pennsylvania: Quinnipiac: Obama 48, McCain 45

    Florida: Quinnipiac: McCain 50, Obama 43

    Ohio: Quinnipiac: McCain 44, Obama 49 (!!)

    National: Rasmussen Tracking: McCain 48, Obama 48

  3. 3 Marv

    Coco,
    Do the internals for the national Rasmussen poll still indicate a skew towards more Republicans in terms of weighting the different parties? If so, then this “tie” may in fact not be a tie at all. Yesterday’s report that Gallup and the other major polls that indicated a sudden surge in support for McCain were in fact based on an increase in number of Republicans polled versus a decrease in number of Democrats, and this despite the massive voter registration numbers showing 11 million new Democrats!!! How deceptive.

  4. 4 Taniel

    Marv,
    Rasmussen weights its results by partisan ID and the effect you talk about is thus minimal in that tracking. That’s why there have been much smaller swings in Rasmussen than in other surveys (especially Gallup).

  5. 5 Anonymous

    The table is even easier to interpret.

    Any state where the DEM take of new voters is higher than the national average based on partisan breakdown is already to the DEMS advantage, i.e., FL, IA and above all else, NV, NM, NC, PA, and then, the higher the under 35 component, the more likely that those voters will go for Obama.

    And there are yet new voters to be registered, so DEMS, time to stop bellyaching over one week of generally bad polls. McCain has had to watch 5 months of bad polls for his team, we can endure one week.

    And please note that in spite of this, statistically, McCain has yet to flip even one Kerry state. Not one.

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