Optimism and the Mysterious Independent Voters
By Chad Peace on 10/19/2012 in independent voters with 5 CommentsRead Time: 3 - 4 minutes
The topic of the ever-mysterious independent voter goes largely ignored until election time, when candidates and their consultants realize that re-election depends on winning their vote. The independent voter is often defined as someone in the middle, someone who is “too uninformed to decide,” or someone who doesn’t care enough to participate. Consultants spend a lot of money trying to inform these voters about how “in-the-middle” their candidate is, compared to the “other guy/gal,” through negative ads and high priced mailers. They are quick to know how to talk to these independent voters, but rarely admit when their messages don’t resonate.
The independent voter is just a state of mind. It is humble enough to admit when it’s wrong, but stubborn enough to resist knee-jerk negativity caused by sensationalized headlines and polarized political ads. Independent voters need to be persuaded, not told. They are largely the “undecided voters” because the choices offered by our two big parties haven’t done enough to persuade them lately.
The independent voter isn’t on the consultant’s voter file. He or she is not reading their mailers. And if they do, its because, by chance, he/she glimpsed at the content on the way to the trash can, hoping that this time, maybe, this candidate had something meaningful to say.
The difficulty in defining an independent voter is because independents, by definition, are not bound by a common set of opinions or a rigid belief system. Independent voters span the entire political spectrum, not a portion of it. There are Republican independent voters. There are Democrats, Libertarians, Green, Peace and Freedom, and so on; they can be independents too.
What binds independent voters, in my opinion, is a common agreement that your party affiliation doesn’t make you right all the time — it doesn’t make you wrong either.
Independent voters should be optimistic. The truth is we never have as much control over things as we would like to believe. Government policies effect the economy only on the margin. The only thing that has been consistent is that the consensus view is often wrong, often right.
That’s why no matter how hard they try, the mathematicians and economists are usually wrong. Because we live in an irrational world in which emotion and premonition are far more powerful than rationality. Religion and philosophy offer structure to our unstructured world. The math wizzes put it all into numbers. Indeed, of all people, they know the limits of their math. Yet they continue to believe that they can cheat the randomness of life. The truly brilliant mathematicians are a fascinating collection of tortured souls.
But, we lurch forward nonetheless, largely because the young among us do not appreciate the peril of the past and instead focus on the intrigue that is the future. Will it be a “better” future?
It’s an ugly world for most people. Americans are one of the few exceptions. And anyone who doesn’t think the US will be fine in the long run isn’t a pessimist or wrong – one is an emotion the other a guess – they’re lazy and defeatist. We have everything as Americans – the fear of losing it is not an acceptable excuse to do so. And the competition of ideas from all sides of the debate is the healthiest way forward.




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5 Comments
Michael Higham
10.19.2012
@michaelhigham
Independent voter should be optimistic, I agree. The dissatisfaction with partisan and meaningless discourse is going to turn into a movement, if it hasn’t already. The only thing I would advise to independent voters is to be skeptical of politicians claiming to be independent in an attempt to take advantage of the movement. I probably wouldn’t have to tell them that though, because I think independence and skepticism goes hand in hand.
Lucas Eaves
10.19.2012
@lucaseaves
Love this piece except maybe the last paragraph, a bit too patriotic for my taste when the article could apply to other countries. Definitely in the ranks of the optimistics.
Loretta Breuning
10.19.2012
@lbreuning
Great points:
1. We don’t have as much control as we’d like to imagine.
2. A party affiliation can’t make you right (ie. righteous) all the time.
3. Competition of ideas is healthy, regardless of wins and losses.
Good things to hold in mind on a daily basis!
Robert B. Winn
10.20.2012
I differ with the author in my belief that political parties are incapable of providing good government, a fact first pointed out by George Washington. The problem with political parties is that the only direction they take government is in the direction of party excesses. This government started because of the party excesses in England which party politicians in England hoped to pay for by imposing some additional taxes on the American colonies. Today taxes are irrelevant. Party excesses are paid for by increasing the national debt. Taxation without representation was inconsequential compared with the increased debt without representation imposed on independent voters of today.
Christopher Hood
10.20.2012
Absolutely nothing. The fact that half of the country wants to vote for guys who have flat out said they will make the middle class lives harder before saying “we didn’t say that” and to be applauded for it- really shows that our country- our species- is really evolved to the stupidity around it.
If our country votes Obama and actually lets him do his job- maybe there will be. With romney- poverty, war, civil war Depression. The rich will prevail and not help a soul.