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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
13.12.2007
Hillary's Parking Lot Obstacle

Adam Nagourney notes the Obama camp's vastly superior Iowa expertise. And in my experience, those guys do have a stunningly deep knowledge of the minutae of the state that dates back decades. 

But Hillary has a much bigger problem on her hands. When you caucus, you don't just dump a secret ballot into a slot. Caucuses are social events and individual decisions on caucus night are shaped by social pressures. Gephardt veterans like to describe how their 2004 free fall occurred in the moments between the time that caucus-goers parked their cars and sat down to do the evening's business. That's when they encountered the enthusiasm for Kerry and Edwards with their own eyes; they grew ashamed to cast their votes for someone so seemingly fusty as Gephardt. Sticking with Gephardt became an act of social courage that stunningly few made--at least relative to his stronger pre-caucus poll numbers.

Clearly, Obama is shrouded in an excitement that Hillary can't match at present. So, how will Hillary's soft supporters respond when confronted with this excitement on caucus night? Will they hold firm to their commitment to Hillary in the face of this enthusiasm? Or will they decide to give into Obama as they make their way from the parking lot. Hillary is hardly doomed to a Gephardt-like crumble on caucus night. Enthusiasm for Obama could wane between now and January 3rd. And she could solidify her support. But if I were her people, I'd be worried about such a doomsday scenario. 

--Frank Foer

Posted: Thursday, December 13, 2007 10:30 AM with 5 comment(s)

Comments

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stgla said:

This is a really interesting theory.  I'd like to see someone (a journalist!) try to document or quantify it if they have not done so already.  Start with these "Gephardt veterans" and move on to caucus-goers themselves.  Thanks.

December 13, 2007 10:50 AM

virginiacentrist said:

Great post, Frank. The weird social pressures of the caucus format will manifest themselves in many ways next month. The enthuisasm of the Obama supporters is certainly one of them.

December 13, 2007 10:57 AM

wgcreeley said:

They're going to broadcast one caucus on C-SPAN, if I remember correctly. I'm hoping it will be one in which older, more been-in-Iowa-forever farmer types meet youthful Obama-ism. Unstoppable force v. immovable object - will be fascinating for sure.

December 13, 2007 1:01 PM

blackton said:

wgcreely, I think you mean immovable object (old farmer) meets unstoppable force (obama voter).

I am afraid it will all come out of Edwards hide in just such a case. 20 Hillary supporters versus 20 Obama ones and 15 Edwards supporters on the side, which way they break will determine the course of the election.  My guess, being someone who likes both Edwards and Obama, is that they will break for Obama, but that could be just wishful thinking.

December 13, 2007 2:14 PM

psantillana said:

Great post indeed, and something I haven't read before anyplace else. I've also been wondering, along those same lines, if H's "Caucusing is Easy!" ads wouldn't backfire on her in this way, since they are aimed at people who are, by definition, soft supporters - they are people who could decide not to caucus because they're not sure how, or think it's a pain in the ass. So they see this ad, drag their tired asses to caucus, hoping it's easy, and are confronted with a mob of fired up, ready-to-talk-all-day-and-night Obama supporters, and they might get swayed into the O camp just to shut them up and go home. I know jurors often do that in deliberations ["men hang so that jurors may dine"], and jury deliberations seem a lot like caucuses, though I've never done the latter.

December 13, 2007 4:25 PM

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