Rural. Rust Belt. Workers. A decent percentage of them
Evangelical. Mitt Romney
never appealed to them.
They stayed home.
This is not to bash Mitt Romney. He personally elevated his game
in the last month, and he is a decent man. But his failures here
were eminently predictable. Oh, by the final week, I thought he had
overcome his problem in this area, almost by default. But I was
wrong then — because I was
right all throughout last year and through
the winter and spring of this year. In a very long blog post,
here was one of my key paragraphs:
But it is the blue-collar worker, or small-business retailer,
who (polls show) votes more often on cultural cues (not necessarily
social issues per se, although that is sometimes the case, but more
on stylistic cultural cues and concerns) than on other factors.
Again, this is obviously a gross over-generalization (as is most
30,000-foot-level political socio-analysis), but these are indeed,
as Rick Santorum keeps saying, the people who swing elections in
states like Ohio, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Missouri.
The are far more likely to swing behind Santorum (or Gingrich, or
Perry) than behind the stiff rich guy with a “weird” religion and
no middle-cultural social affinities (“shooting… small varmints”
and flipping on homosexual “marriage”).
Romney’s campaign never fixed that problem. Given Romney’s
background, personality, and demeanor, it might have been
impossible to do so, even with the best of campaign messages and
tactics. but there it is: Disaffected white voters stayed home
rather than vote for Romney, even though such people usually will
turn out to vote against the guy in power who they usually blame
for their less-than-ideal economic/other circumstances. They were
not going to vote for Obama no matter what, not because of his race
but because he had produced poor results. If they had voted, they
would have voted against Obama. But Romney never “connected” with
them, so they didn’t vote. That’s why the election was lost.