Interesting and depressing article on how people vote

The current New Yorker has an interesting – but rather depressing – article on how most Americans decide who to vote for. Here’s a sample, but I recommend reading the whole thing:

…electoral outcomes, as far as “the will of the people” is concerned, are essentially arbitrary. The fraction of the electorate that responds to substantive political arguments is hugely outweighed by the fraction that responds to slogans, misinformation, “fire alarms” (sensational news), “October surprises” (last-minute sensational news), random personal associations, and “gotchas.” Even when people think that they are thinking in political terms, even when they believe that they are analyzing candidates on the basis of their positions on issues, they are usually operating behind a veil of political ignorance. They simply don’t understand, as a practical matter, what it means to be “fiscally conservative,” or to have “faith in the private sector,” or to pursue an “interventionist foreign policy.” They can’t hook up positions with policies. From the point of view of democratic theory, American political history is just a random walk through a series of electoral options. Some years, things turn up red; some years, they turn up blue.
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3 Responses to Interesting and depressing article on how people vote

  1. 1
    Rook says:

    Does that mean I shouldn’t vote for Georgie worgie because of his folksie way of talking? I thought it was cute the way he can never finish a sentence without studdering.

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