I’ve been thinking about this issue a lot but only now have gotten around to posting. I think Clinton is a significantly better general election candidate than Sanders. In a nutshell, Hillary’s numbers are unlikely to deteriorate, while Bernie’s could fall substantially.
Clinton is well known to the entire electorate based on 24 years of national prominence. She has her supporters and her detractors. Although her favorability is not great, I think all of her negatives are priced in. This is not the case with Sen. Sanders. Other than political junkies or Vermonters, Bernie has only become widely known in the last few months. I think he is an attack ad waiting to happen. According to a recent WSJ/NBC news poll, favorable/unfavorable numbers are as follows:”
Obama 49-47, Clinton 37-50, Sanders 42-35
So what will these numbers look like after Republican attack ads commence? A commenter at TPM wrote “I think the Republicans have a potentially brutal pre-scripted attack in the general election on him: divorced, atheist, socialist white guy from a small liberal state, and the oldest person ever to run for the office. Red-baiting, with all of its unsavory and anti-semitic implications, may rear its ugly head.”
Having watched John Kerry and Michael Dukakis see their popularity plummet in the face of attacks, I fear Bernie could fall quite a bit. It’s not just the ugly sentiments quoted above; it will be about how his policy proposals can be put into thirty second commercials which show what Americans what they would lose if Bernie prevails. Specifically, while single payer health care makes sense if starting from scratch, it would be an enormous change compared to our largely employer-based system now bolstered by Obamacare exchanges and subsidies. Employer-based care works well for most Americans most of the time. The attack adds will stress that under Berniecare you can’t choose your plan, you get the government plan. Though I understand that the government plan would look a lot like Medicare (which is fine), the ads will leave many voters very concerned about losing choice and coverage. Change is difficult. The fight for, and since enactment of, Obamacare demonstrates this. There is a lot of research that voters worry about loss of specific benefits (such as the right to choose their plan) than more generalized gains (better overall health care coverage throughout the nation). The anti Berniecare ads will be devastating.
The wild card here is whether Hillary’s email scandal will get worse and bring her numbers down beyond where they are now. This is an area I am still researching, but my current thinking is that it will not get worse and is currently priced into her numbers. Two writers that I respect, Josh Marshall and Kevin Drum believe the story is largely bogus in terms of actual threat to national security/ likelihood of an indictment. (Note: I think even they would concede it has not been handled well and reinforces views that Clinton is secretive and acts a bit entitled). In a nutshell, all the talk about “sharing classified material” is really a fight between the FBI and State Department determining ,after the fact, whether information is in fact classified. Recently in my professional life related to refugee policy, my staff received an email from the state department. The very bottom of the email said “This Email is Unclassified.” I believe most of the controversy is whether these “unclassified” designations were subsequently changed after Hillary received or sent such an email. To the extend this has happened, it impacts Colin Powell as well. The following is from Politico, and it lends more credence to the idea that the email scandal is overblown:
Even more than a primary opponent, Emailgate would never fight fair. With no one understanding the State Department’s two different, totally separate email systems—the normal, unprotected (whether using the State Department’s server or Hillary’s home server) one relying on unprotected BlackBerries and desktops to which anyone could and did send any material at any time and the hard-to-access, rarely used, laptop accessible-only protected one that would stamp emails “Classified”—Emailgate could assume whatever size and grotesque features a journalist or Republican chose to ascribe to it. Absent a real primary contest to draw some attention and with Clinton alone in the public eye, Emailgate threatened to appear and undermine every Clinton rally, interview and media hit as her campaign went on.
Embedded in the paragraph is the totally sensible idea that most government email is not classified and not particularly secure. For classified information, there is a special “laptop accessible-only protected” system. Like I said, I’m still researching Hillary’s exposure on this issue, but for now I think it’s minimal. I will update on this issue as I learn more. BTW, I don’t usually read Politico, but the above piece makes an interesting argument about how Bernie’s campaign is just strong enough to make Hillary a better candidate without any real risk to deposing her for the nomination. I don’t necessarily agree with all of it, but worth a read:
Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2016/02/new-hampshire-bernie-sanders-hillary-clinton-213613#ixzz3zzkyO6Yz