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- <text id=91TT1604>
- <title>
- July 22, 1991: Vaulting over Political Polls
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 22, 1991 The Colorado
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 27
- PUBLIC OPINION
- Vaulting over Political Polls
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A Texas political scientist is creating a new form of voter
- sampling, with results to appear on PBS nationwide
- </p>
- <p>By Walter Shapiro
- </p>
- <p> Since the turmoil of the 1968 Democratic Convention,
- American democracy has been stymied by what should be a simple
- question: What is the fairest way to nominate candidates for
- President?
- </p>
- <p> Nearly a quarter-century of well-intentioned reforms have
- demonstrated the law of unintended consequences. Until 1968,
- party leaders controlled the process, spicing up their back-room
- bargaining with a handful of hotly contested presidential
- primaries. This elitist tradition has been replaced in both
- parties by the shallowest form of mass democracy: a gauntlet of
- party primaries (36 states in 1988) that give an almost
- unbeatable edge to the candidate who can raise the most money.
- Rather than bring presidential contenders closer to the voters,
- the current system virtually walls the candidates off behind a
- TV barrier of sound bites, slogans and slick 30-second spots.
- </p>
- <p> Presidential politics has grown so dispiriting that most
- Americans are inured to the impossibility of change. The op-ed
- pages and opinion magazines have long been littered with
- high-minded reform proposals, but every four years the system
- repeats itself, a little more cynically manipulative than the
- time before.
- </p>
- <p> Enter the man who may have finally invented a better
- mousetrap: political scientist James Fishkin, chairman of the
- government department at the University of Texas. He calls his
- innovative method for bridging the chasm between electors and
- the elected "a deliberative opinion poll." The voters will get
- a chance to see how it works on national public television next
- January.
- </p>
- <p> Fishkin begins with a telling critique of political
- polling, the main tool that the candidates and their handlers
- use to divine the will of the voters. As he argues in his
- forthcoming book, Democracy and Deliberation (Yale University
- Press; $17.95), "On many issues, about four out of five citizens
- do not have stable...opinions; they have what the political
- psychologists call `non-attitudes' or `pseudo-opinions.' "
- Fishkin's point is that traditional sampling does not allow
- those polled to discuss the issues, nor do the polltakers
- provide more than cursory information. The result, all too
- often, is a statistically impeccable snapshot of public
- ignorance and apathy. Presidential candidates then respond to
- the polls not by striving to present the electorate with worthy
- policies but by tailoring their appeals to the lowest common
- denominator of voter sentiment.
- </p>
- <p> Fishkin proposes a bold antidote: flying a random sample
- of the entire electorate to a single place, where they would
- meet face-to-face with the presidential candidates and debate
- the issues. Then, and only then, would the group be polled on
- its preferences. Such a reform, if effected, would combine the
- democracy of the modern primary system with the firsthand
- knowledge of candidates that old-time party leaders brought to
- the nominating process.
- </p>
- <p> Sound farfetched, the kind of Rube Goldberg scheme an
- armchair academic would concoct, oblivious to political
- realities? Not at all. The Public Broadcasting Service has
- quietly embraced Fishkin's idea and plans to televise six to
- eight hours of excerpts of the exercise during the weekend of
- Jan. 17-19, a month before the 1992 campaign formally begins
- with the Iowa caucuses. Named the National Issues Convention,
- the three-day, $3.5 million conclave in Austin holds the
- potential to shape the late-starting, who's-running-anyway
- Democratic race and provide a forum for the Bush Administration
- to field-test its campaign themes. As Edward Fouhy, executive
- producer of the PBS broadcast, puts it, "This is the only thing
- that holds the hope of breaking out of the mold that we--both
- journalists and politicians--have been caught in."
- </p>
- <p> Many of the details are still hazy, but the broad elements
- of this unprecedented John and Jane Doe convention are in
- place. The pivotal moment will come in December, when about 600
- randomly selected adult Americans will be told they have won the
- political lottery and are delegates to the National Issues
- Convention. Will they agree to put aside their normal lives for
- a weekend and fly all-expenses-paid to Austin? Fishkin is
- optimistic. "What you're offering these people is three days on
- national TV, a chance to meet the candidates, a chance to make
- history, a sunny climate and a reasonable per diem allowance,"
- he says. "For a lot of these people, this will be the most
- important thing that has ever happened to them."
- </p>
- <p> For the Democratic contenders, whoever they prove to be,
- the lure will be free TV time and the possibility of gaining
- credibility by winning the delegates' endorsement. Although
- Fishkin and the other convention organizers hope the President
- will make an appearance, they will be satisfied if several
- Cabinet members attend as Administration surrogates.
- </p>
- <p> What is so beguiling about the National Issues Convention
- is that no one--absolutely no one--has any idea how it will
- play out. But whatever happens in Austin, the novel event
- itself will be an affirmation that grass-roots democracy can
- still flourish in a television age.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-