Based on the New York Times
exit poll, we can make a few snap judgements about the failed
attempt to recall Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.
- Union households and non-union households voted
completely differently. About one-third of the
voters in yesterday’s recall election said they or a member of
their household belongs to a union. They voted 62 percent for
Democrat Tom Barrett, while 61 percent of those with no union
member in the household voted for Walker.
- Independents voted for Walker, self-described moderates
for Barrett. Walker carried 54 percent of independents,
who were 31 percent of the electorate. Voters identifying with the
two major parties polarized. But Barrett took 54 percent of the 44
percent of voters who describe themselves as moderate. Walker was
fortunate that conservatives gave him 86 percent of the vote, the
same percentage Barrett got among the much smaller slice of
liberals.
- Voters narrowly approved of Walker’s collective
bargaining reforms. The exits found that 52 percent
supported the reforms that led to the recall while 47 percent
opposed them.
- Voters approved of Walker’s handling of job
creation. Fully 54 percent approved of Walker’s efforts to
create jobs, while 46 percent disapproved. That’s close to the
final outcome between Walker and Barrett.
- The people who voted in the recall election still prefer Barack
Obama to Mitt Romney. Obama beats Romney 51 percent to 44 percent
in the exit poll. Interestingly, nearly one in five Obama voters
supported Walker while only 6 percent of Romney voters favored
Barrett.
There’s some limit to what this shows nationally, though it will
surely embolden other Republican governors and legislators to
replicate Walker’s collective bargaining reform. It will warm feet
that got cold after Ohio Gov. John Kasich was previously rebuked on
this issue via a ballot initiative.
UPDATE: Michael Barone
resamples the Wisconsin exit polls to match the results and
finds a 48-48 breakdown between Romney and Obama.