Newsweek - National News, World News, Health, Technology, Entertainment and more... | Newsweek.com
SPONSORED BY
Full Post
Posted Friday, April 18, 2008 3:14 PM

Hearts and Minds: Voters' Feelings About the Candidates

Sharon Begley

The thrill is gone.

Maybe voters are simply tired of the seemingly endless campaign for the Democratic nomination. Or maybe their excitement about the new (Barack Obama), the suddenly emoting (Hillary Clinton, in New Hampshire) or the coming-back-from the-politically-dead (John McCain) can’t last forever. But whatever the reason, voters are feeling much less excitement and fewer positive emotions about all three of the remaining presidential candidates than they once did, finds a poll that, uniquely, measures voters’ emotional reactions.

If the trend continues, that’s bad news for the candidates, because research keeps showing that voters base their decisions more on their hearts than their heads and are easily swayed by anxiety, fear and other negative emotions. Latest evidence: anyone who feels—the key word—that Obama doesn’t understand “people like me” because he said that voters embittered about their economic plight “cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them.” If that loses him any votes, it will not be because of a rational analysis of his record and positions, but because of how it made people feel about him.

Advertisement

Anyway, a company called AdSam measures what it calls “Emotional Temperature,” which gauges people’s emotional engagement with a product, website or advertisement. Since, as we all know from Joe McGinniss’s 1969 book, “The Selling of the President, 1968,” candidates are marketed and sold just like detergent, the same technique should work with politicians.

In its latest study, AdSam measured how strongly voters feel about each candidate, and how engaging they find them. Since last September, Clinton’s “emotional temperature has been on a continual steep decline with voters,” says AdSam president Jon Morris, a professor at the University of Florida, dropping from 93 to 70 (where 173 is how emotionally positive voters say they would like to feel about a candidate). “Her emotional cool-off is a sign that she is not relevant and not making connections with voters. This is a significant barrier for her and will be very difficult for her to turn around.”

Clinton trails both McCain and Obama, whose emotional temperatures are very similar (85 and 88, respectively, this month) and have not fallen off a cliff the way Clinton’s has. Obama dropped 8 points from September to January (97 to 89), and has stayed at about that “temperature” since. McCain moved up 9 points from September to January (79 to 88), but is down 3 points since.

Obama generates the most positive emotional response among Democrats (beating Clinton 120 to 97) and beats McCain among Independents (97 to 81), with Clinton at 74 among Independents. McCain has finally excited and united Republicans, however, zooming from 101 last September to 145 now.

Clinton is leaving more voters cold, says Morris. Compared to last September or even January, fewer voters feel “interested/excited” by her, while more feel “reluctant,” “uninterested/unexcited” and even “disgusted.” The biggest reason for the turnaround, Morris finds, is that more voters perceive Clinton as dishonest.

Obama is making more Democrats “interested/excited” now than he did in January, but more are also feeling “ambivalent” about him. In follow-up interviews, voters use words such as “truthful,” “honest,” “trust” and “inspirational,” but more and more cite his scant experience on the national stage. The Illinois senator has further to go with Independents: 21 percent feel strong positive emotions about him, compared to 32 percent last September. Equally worrisome, 28 percent now feel “ambivalent,” the most of any emotion among Independents asked about Obama.

More Democrats (20 percent) were disgusted by Clinton’s dishonesty about coming under fire during a trip to Bosnia than by Obama’s links to his controversial pastor (10 percent). We'll see how this translates into votes in Pennsylvania next Tuesday.

Tag(s):
You must be a registered user to comment.  Click here to register.  Already a user?  Click here to login.

Member Comments

Posted By: dilavan (September 10, 2008 at 12:29 PM)

What the Presidential Campaign 2008 for both parties lacks and Schoolboy Strategies.

1)-The first failed strategy; Not identifying the real issues a qualified candidate should be focused upon.

2)-The second failed strategy; Focusing on ethnicity, gender, and slander as viable issues.

3)-The third failed strategy; Assuming the ignorance of voters  when it comes to evaluating the candidates qualifications for their respective offices.

4)-The fourth failed strategy; The lack of both political parties to differentiate themselves on issues facing Americans.

5)-The fifth failed stategy; Playing gender games; i.e. Obama does not balance the ticket  with Hillary so McCain chooses a female candidate to lure the female vote.

6)-The sixth failed strategy:  Candidates failing to encourage the media to inform the voting public of where the candidates stand based upon their record in the past and present on issues confronting America both abroad and at home. i.e. The Middle East crisis; The Environment, Energy; Jobs; The Russian resurgency; Markets in elapse etc. etc.etc.

In summation. Whos qualified for the jobs in this campaign? It speaks to the need to break the good old boys cast system of two party big money politics at every level of government and open the door for other parties that can put before the American Public other leaders out there that may have America's interests at heart rather than their own pluralistic agendas both in light of their own positions and in those they surround themselves with; i.e. cabinets etc.

I for one see the present presidential campaigns as "SLANDEROLITICS" pure and simple!


Posted By: Chapalody (April 19, 2008 at 7:09 AM)

It doesn't help a candidate who comes into a race thinking the presidency is an entitlement. Nor has it helped Hillary's ego in thinking it was going to be hands off because she was first lady. If there's one thing Hillary has shown to dislike is being treated like a normal candidate running for the presidency. She quickly let it be known early in the race, it doesn't matter if she's losing. The media will not ask her questions first and she will not be picked on. Hillary wanted the hands off policy the media respected during Bill's Presidency to extend in her run for the Presidency. It's not Obama's fault Penn couldn't "humanize" Hillary earlier in the race. It wasn't Obama's fault Bill Clinton has done more harm to Hillary's campaign then Obama has. It's not Obama's fault Hillary can't manage her campaign better or pay bills. It's better to make the people comfortable when you speak to them. Obama established himself early in the race with the people. When Obama was talking about hope and change, Hillary was attacking. The people were getting to know Obama and all Hillary did by attacking Obama early in the race about no experiences or issues, all talk and no action, is separate her from the people. Hillary has political experience, she has no people experience. Obama has both. Which is why he makes people feel comfortable around him. What did Hillary say, if it looks like I'm intense and upset all the time is because I am. If Hillary is that way, how will she ever expect to make people feel comfortable around her. The glow Obama's attackers say is no longer there, is still there. If it wasn't, Obama would not be climbing in the polls or getting the endorsements he's been getting. Much to Obama's credit, he doesn't cave in due to the labels he's been given, instead he stays on message about hope and change. The only message Hillary seems to get out is I'm a survivor, I have an over active imagination, I get caught constantly in lies, I'm the best candidate to be President, and I will anything to win the nomination, even if it means forming a coalition with Conservative talk radio and Fox news to do it.


Posted By: HigherMinds (April 19, 2008 at 3:09 AM)

To All Clinton Supporters -- don't waste all your time on these go nowhere blogs ... take a few minutes away from here and write the Party instead!

Write the Democratic National Committee and tell them how you feel. Here is the link: http://www.democrats.org/

It's clear that one-half of the Democratic Party needs to make the Party understand where you stand. Then tell your friends of like minds to do the same. Don't let yourselves be overlooked or railroaded. Use the power of the written word to make a difference ... which, on the blogs, it doesn't ... but if you write the Party, it will.