Bloomberg View (Opinion)
By Francis Wilkinson
October 23, 2015
October
has been a clarifying month. The first Democratic debate exhibited
Hillary Clinton's competence and reassured the Democratic Party elite
that she remains a formidable
candidate. In addition, it helped chase two also-rans -- Jim Webb and
Lincoln Chafee -- from the primary and appears to have breached the
porous borders of Senator Bernie Sanders' support.
This
week, Vice President Joe Biden's retreat from the field ratified
Clinton's commanding position, freeing up funds and quashing a
distraction in the news media. Then
the much-anticipated House Benghazi hearing unfolded.
After
two Republicans recently acknowledged the Benghazi committee's partisan
agenda -- roughing up Clinton -- the Republicans on the panel had extra
incentive to appear
decorous and sober. A couple managed. Others played the role of barking
seals at a dystopic Sea World, spinning bright conspiracies on their
noses in hopes of being tossed a kipper from the fringe. If the goal was
to soften the hard feelings some Democrats
hold against Clinton, Republican pride must be swelling at the
committee's resourcefulness.
With
a month of drama behind us, Clinton's status is back to where it was
many months ago: She is on track to win her party's nomination without
enormous difficulty. Republicans
still hope to derail her candidacy, with high hopes that scandalous
e-mails will be the new deus ex machina. Barring that, they hope that
those Democrats and Independents who've never warmed to Team Hillary
will remain resistant right through November, 2016.
Perhaps
the e-mails, which are trickling out in regular intervals, will fatally
damage Clinton some way, somehow. But it seems unlikely. In which case
Clinton will simply
be a competent Democrat running for president in the mainstream of her
party, supported by an incumbent president who is very popular with
Democrats and sustaining credible overall favorable ratings in an angry,
polarized environment. In other words, Clinton
will be running with all the structural advantages that would accrue to
any competent mainstream Democrat in 2016.
As
each month passes without GOP inroads to Hispanic or Asian voters, the
Republican demographic conundrum looms. The party seems incapable of
attracting new nonwhite
voters without alienating old white ones. Jeb Bush is arguably the only
viable Republican who can make a credible appeal to Hispanic votes, and
he has a rough path ahead. (How easy would it be for Marco Rubio to
switch his stand on immigration for a second
time, with political expediency again being the obvious, overriding
motivation? Not very.)
Obama
won a 5-million-vote margin of victory in 2012 with the same share of
the white vote, 39 percent, that condemned Michael Dukakis to defeat in
1988. The 2012 electorate
was 72 percent white; in 2016 it will be closer to 70 percent. (Rubio
pollster White Ayres predicts it will be 69 percent.) Clinton can fall
short of Obama's share of black or Hispanic votes and still win the
presidency. If she falls a bit short on both --
and right now there's no particular reason to believe she will -- and
yet does better than Obama with white women, which seems eminently
plausible, she can replicate or exceed Obama's victory.
Republicans
are hoping that demography is not destiny. An economic downturn would
help their cause. Barring that, however, it will likely require more
than generic resistance
to giving one party a third term in the White House, or liberal unease
over Clinton, to alter the dynamics. When the partisan lines of the
election are drawn, liberals will almost certainly vote for the
Democrat.
Without a downturn, one of three conditions would have to prevail:
1. A Republican nominee of extraordinary talent and reach -- a conservative Obama.
2. A Clinton implosion due to scandal or health or unforeseen events.
3.
A Republican campaign of such relentless negativity that it drives down
turnout, enabling the GOP's older white base to outperform and tilt the
election.
There
is no Republican Obama on the horizon, though Rubio might approximate
one. A Clinton implosion is surely possible, but doesn't seem especially
likely. And there
are real risks, for a party increasingly defined by anger, negativity
and intemperate attacks, to running a scorched earth campaign for the
White House.
So
not only is Clinton back where she started, so is the GOP. The party is
no closer to gaining Hispanic, Asian or black votes than it was in
2012. (Spanish media has
been highlighting Republican anti-immigrant tirades for months.)
Meanwhile, the elderly white share of the electorate -- the Republican
base -- continues to shrink.
Bernie,
Biden and Benghazi have been fun, but they've done nothing to alter the
demographic dynamic of 2016. And Republicans appear no more prepared to
answer the challenge.
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