Assessing Obama's Reelection Chances

Assessing Obama's Reelection Chances

Obama is in much better shape than his opponents and detractors profess to believe.

Those desperately desirous of divining the outcome of next year’s presidential election might consult a 1990 book by political scientist Allan J. Lichtman and journalist Ken DeCell—Thirteen Keys to the Presidency: Prediction Without Polls. It presents a series of questions about incumbent presidents that, when analyzed, constitute a framework for predicting presidential elections. The framework is based on the supposition that presidential elections are referendums, that they turn largely on the performance of the incumbent and not on campaign minutia such as candidate gaffes, fundraising differentials and attack ads. And bear in mind that some of the thirteen keys call for subjective answers. Hence there will be room for ongoing debate as to what they actually tell us about our current incumbent.

The keys were devised by Lichtman through a complex pattern of algorithms that apply to politics a mathematical technique called "pattern recognition," used in science for such things as predicting earthquakes. Essentially, the method seeks to illuminate the politics of today by discerning patterns of circumstance that reflect the country’s political path through history. The Lichtman/DeCell formula, as interpreted by the authors, has held up in every U.S. presidential election since 1860.

Even if the exercise isn’t definitive, it’s fun. So let’s use it as a yardstick to measure President Obama’s chances for reelection. Not all of the keys reflect performance, strictly defined. Some reflect the country’s political situation, while others focus on the kind of figure presented by the incumbent and the challenger. But performance is the most significant index. The keys are presented in the form of statements that require true or false answers. If five or fewer are false, the incumbent party wins; if six or more are false, the incumbent party goes down.

1) After the midterm elections, the incumbent party holds more seats in the U.S. House than it did after the previous midterm elections.

2) There is no serious contest for the incumbent-party nomination.

3) The incumbent-party candidate is the sitting president.

4) There is no significant third-party or independent campaign.

5) The economy is not in recession during the election campaign.

6) Real per capita economic growth during the term equals or exceeds mean growth during the previous two terms.

7) The incumbent administration effects major changes in national policy.

8) There is no sustained social unrest during the term.

9) The incumbent administration is untainted by major scandal.

10) The incumbent administration suffers no major failure in foreign or military affairs.

11) The incumbent administration achieves a major success in foreign or military affairs.

12) The incumbent-party candidate is charismatic or a national hero.

13) The challenging-party candidate is not charismatic or a national hero.

If this collection of statements does indeed reflect the sensibility of the electorate in presidential elections, it says something significant about how the voters’ collective judgment emerges—namely, that no single element of performance will make or break a president. Many political observers have written off Obama based on his economic performance, but that is reflected in only two of the Lichtman/DeCell keys. He can have a bad economy and still get reelected. But consider also how the keys may be intertwined. A bad economy can bring on an intraparty nomination fight, for example, or can lead to party losses in midterm elections. Or a military failure can bring on social unrest, which in turn can stimulate a third-party campaign entry. Against this backdrop, let’s look at the Obama performance against these keys.

Key 1: The answer is false. Obama’s party holds fewer House seats than it did after the previous midterm elections. This one goes against the president.

Key 2: True. There is no serious nomination fight in the president’s party.

Key 3: True. The incumbent-party candidate is the sitting president. This is the one key that confers a slight advantage to incumbency, but only with a sitting president representing the party.

Key 4: Unknown. There is still time for a significant third-party or independent campaign, and under the Lichtman/DeCell thesis it would almost inevitably harm the incumbent more than the challenger.

Key 5: Unknown. If the economy continues to grow through the campaign year, this key goes to Obama; if it slips into recession, it goes against him.

Key 6: False. Obama loses the key regarding real per capita economic growth during his term, which must equal or exceed mean growth during the previous two terms.

Key 7: A tough one. The key statement is: The incumbent administration effects major changes in national (domestic) policy. Certainly, the president’s health-care initiative would qualify as a major change in domestic policy. But it is also the most unpopular, even despised, piece of domestic legislation in memory. Is it possible that the Lichtman/DeCell algorithms didn’t anticipate such a development as a major legislative victory that turns sour? Also, what if the Supreme Court negates the law? Then this key would definitively turn against Obama. In the meantime, this key remains a bit of a mystery—and fodder for endless political discussion.

Key 8: So far, true. There has been no sustained social unrest during the current presidential term. It appeared recently that the Occupy movement might generate enough strife in the streets to turn this key against Obama. But that hasn’t happened and doesn’t appear likely to. So Obama is hanging onto this one.

Key 9: So far, true. No serious scandal has emerged in the administration. Solyndra and Fast & Furious are scandalous, of course, but they aren’t of the magnitude that turns large numbers of voters against the incumbent or incumbent party. This one looks relatively safe for Obama.

Key 10: Open to debate. A major failure in foreign or military affairs can be difficult to define. There is no question that, in political terms, Obama took possession of the country’s Afghanistan war when he ordered the troop surge in December 2009. And it’s beyond dispute that the war isn’t going particularly well. Whether this constitutes a major failure is open to debate. Most likely, the voters will give Obama the benefit of the doubt at least through the election. Hence, this is probably in the president’s win column.

Key 11: Reasonable people can argue about this one, regarding whether there has been a major foreign or military success, but most likely it goes to Obama. The extrication of U.S. troops from Iraq on a three-year timetable probably qualifies as such a success. True, the policy was set by the president’s predecessor, George W. Bush. But Obama executed it smoothly and successfully, and he did so as a man who had opposed the war in the first place. Clearly, the American people wanted out, which is one reason why they elected Obama. It’s difficult to see the collective electorate yawning indifferently over this particular achievement.

Key 12: False – but debatable. Even if Obama was a charismatic candidate four years ago, it seems he’s lost his charisma by now through overexposure, a style that often seems defensive and petulant, and an image shrinkage born of widespread national problems he’s been unable to control. It’s difficult to see how he gets this one.

Key 13: Unknown. The question of whether the challenging-party candidate is charismatic remains open until we know at least who that candidate is. Even then, this remains a highly subjective assessment. Few would argue that Mitt Romney is charismatic, but what about Newt Gingrich? No doubt Gingrich himself would argue that he is.

What does it add up to? At this moment, only two keys are clearly turned against Obama—Key 1, House election results; and Key 6, long-term, per capita economic growth. Throw in Key 12, incumbent charisma, thus giving him three negative keys at this point in his term. That would mean he can sustain two more negative keys and still win.

To continue the analysis, let’s look first at keys that could already be negative, based on interpretation. The one that could give the greatest hope to Republicans is Key 10, military failure. But this is questionable, as noted above. Key 11, military success, is even more questionable, based on the electorate’s long-held desire to get American troops out of Iraq.

So let’s look at keys that are indecisive today but could still turn against the president. There could be a major administration scandal, but that seems unlikely. More likely would be sustained social unrest. We live in turbulent times, and just how political turbulence will manifest itself in coming months is difficult to predict. But most likely this key won’t turn against the president. More likely would be a recession in the forthcoming campaign year and the emergence of a significant independent candidate for president. But even if both of those materialized, Obama still would be within his allotment of five negative keys.

Then there is Key 7, major domestic-policy change. It’s difficult to see any Obama initiative that could qualify except Obamacare, but it’s equally difficult to see how this constitutes an electoral triumph when most Americans, according to polls, dislike the outcome. A recent Rasmussen polls indicated 55 percent of respondents favored repeal, and a recent AP poll had support for the law down to 29 percent. It isn’t surprising, given those numbers, that the president and nearly every other Democratic office seeker have studiously avoided talking about the law as the campaign year approaches. Add the prospect that the law could be overturned, and it becomes clear that this particular key is a wild card.

Finally, there is the challenger charisma question. Most likely this one goes to Obama.

Taken in total, this exercise suggests that the president is in significantly better shape for reelection than many of his opponents and detractors have professed to believe. Obama may go down next November, and the keys provide a pretty good picture of just how that could happen. But they also tell us that such an outcome certainly is no foregone conclusion at this point.

Robert W. Merry is editor of The National Interest and the author of books on American history and foreign policy.