Brace yourselves, conservatives. What I’m about to say will
hurt, and it should hurt — and I’m not the first to notice. (Kudos
to Rush Limbaugh, who noticed and is hitting this point hard.) Mitt
Romney lost the 2012 election not so much because he got fewer
votes than Barack Obama but because he got fewer votes than John
McCain in 2008.
Additional votes are still coming in, but, as of the time of my
writing, Romney received around 57.8 million votes in 2012. In
2008, John McCain received 59.9 million. Romney got over 2 million
fewer votes than McCain. And in the final count, he will almost
certainly have received considerably fewer votes than McCain.
Obama received 60.6 million votes in 2012, almost 9 million less
than he received in 2008. If Romney would have had McCain’s vote
total, he would have been much closer in the popular vote and might
have even had enough to win the Electoral College. Or, better put,
if Mitt Romney had secured just a tiny fraction more votes than
John McCain — as we conservatives were certain he would — he
might have won the presidency.
We know this: Romney won independents by 5 points, and they made
up 29% of all voters. McCain didn’t win independents.
What does this really mean? That’s where the hurt comes. It
appears to mean that our side lost because we failed to turn out
our side. It isn’t so much that the Obama-Axelrod apparatus turned
out their side — though they did — but that our side failed to do
what it should have done.
In other words, this was a self-inflicted wound by Republicans,
and a fatal one. It explains why the likes of Dick Morris, Michael
Barone, George Will, Newt Gingrich,
and myself were completely wrong in predicting a Romney
landslide. We were certain that pollsters were oversampling
Democrats in polls that had Romney-Obama dead even or Romney up by
one or two points. The pro-Republican, pro-Romney, and anti-Obama
enthusiasm we were seeing was extremely intense. It was
inconceivable to us that it could be overcome by a higher Democrat
turnout. We were expecting turnout akin to 2010, which favored
Republicans big-time.
And so, Republicans have no one to blame but themselves. I
wouldn’t blame Mitt Romney. He did a superb job. I initially had
not been a Romney supporter, but he won me over. He came across as
a genuinely decent man, one with an unprecedented business
background for a presidential nominee. In retrospect, I couldn’t
imagine a better candidate for the job at this particular time and
given America’s current (economic) vulnerabilities. Unfortunately,
Romney couldn’t pick up votes among Democrats because (exit polls
confirm this) Obama and his campaign succeeded in convincing
Democrats that Obama’s disastrous economic record is the fault of
George W. Bush. That’s a truly incredible thing, but when you
consider this nation’s economic illiteracy, and Democrats’
willingness to unquestioningly accept anything their leaders tell
them, it isn’t a huge surprise.
The exit poll data also shows that only 7% of Democrats voted
for Mitt Romney, just a tad better than the 6% of Republicans who
voted for Obama. In short, there really weren’t any Romney
Democrats.
But that doesn’t explain our side. Why didn’t our side show up
for Mitt Romney?
Was the intensity enthusiasm not as broad as we thought? Did our
side feel we had this in the bag? Did a lot of conservatives not
vote for Romney out of fear that he’s a closet moderate, a closet
liberal, a RINO, or Mr. Etch-a-Sketch?
Was it the Mormon factor? I don’t think so. As
Mark Tooley wrote here yesterday, evangelicals and faithful
Catholics went to the polls for Romney, giving him stronger support
than in 2008.
Many conservatives from the outset urged the Republican Party
not to go with Romney, figuring he was another moderate Republican
destined to lose — like John McCain. On the other hand, they
turned out and gave John McCain a lot more votes.
And what about my state of Pennsylvania, which I embarrassed
myself by predicting it would go for Mitt Romney? It seems to have
suffered the same problem.
Romney received 2.58
million votes in Pennsylvania. In 2008, John McCain received
2.65 million. Obama received 2.86 million votes in Pennsylvania in
2012 (compared to 3.28 million in 2008). If Romney would have
achieved or exceeded McCain’s vote total in Pennsylvania, the state
would have been much closer — closer to what Pennsylvania polls
were showing (a dead-even race) just before Tuesday’s vote. In
2008, Obama won Pennsylvania by 10 points; in 2012, he won by 5
points. Obama won 18 Pennsylvania counties in 2008; in 2012, he won
only 12 (out of 67). In Pennsylvania, Obama’s vote total was way
down from 2008, but our side’s total wasn’t up at all.
In Pennsylvania, I saw a red-hot anti-Obama sentiment and very
strong support for Romney. But apparently it wasn’t wide enough to
compel enough of our side to go to the booth and cast a ballot for
Mitt Romney.
Romney lost because our side wasn’t strong enough to lift him
across the goal-line. It was like we handed the ball to Obama in
the fourth quarter and let him run down field untouched.
What’s the lesson for the GOP? I’m not sure. There are no doubt
other factors missing in my analysis. But this much seems certain:
The old adage is true — people prefer to vote for someone
rather than against someone. The Republican Party was
banking on Republicans turning out to vote against Obama,
regardless of who the Republican nominee was. To some extent, they
did that — but not enough.
Imagine: If someone had told you that Barack Obama would receive
9 million fewer votes in 2012 than 2008, you would have predicted
his sure defeat. You would have been wrong. Republicans blew a huge
opportunity.