The
Sailer Strategy In 2004 [Steve Sailer]
-
11/03/04
The new exit polling
monopoly botched up the big national exit poll so
badly this year that we may never have truly reliable
demographic data for this election. The National
Election Pool data showed solid Kerry leads throughout
the country, missing the actual result by five or six
points. Toward dawn on Wednesday, the
exit poll results were rejiggered to make it look
like more like the actual vote counts. Midday on
Wednesday, they were fiddled with again to make them
even more pro-Bush, this time slopping into overkill.
Who knows what they'll end up with,
but at the moment, the exit poll shows Bush up from 54%
among whites in 2000 to 58%. The pollsters go on to show
Bush up 1 point among "Other" (e.g.,
American Indians) to 40%, up 2 points among
blacks to 11%, up 3 points among
Asians to 44%, and up an implausible-sounding 9
points among Hispanics to 44%—still a heavy defeat.
What this means is that, as in the
2002 election, the GOP quietly dropped almost all its
widely-celebrated interest in outreach and instead went
with a strategy of turning out the traditional
Republican base. In the key state of Ohio, for example,
last month Bush focused on visiting Republican counties
and exciting the party faithful to drag their
conservative but less-political friends to the polls.
This is essentially the course of
action I laid out for Republican revival back in
November of 2000—what VDARE.COM calls
"the Sailer Strategy." The essential idea is the
mindlessly simple but often overlooked fact that the
majority bloc is bigger than all the minority blocs put
together. It’s both easier and more profitable to do a
little better among a big group than to do a lot better
among various small groups.
This was the idea that got
VDARE.COM
banned from Free Republic.
Over time, we'll be able to
assemble more indirect data that will help us get a
better idea of what the demographic results were. More
data will be forthcoming. The Los Angeles Times
should release the results of its small scale exit poll
on Thursday. Experts will no doubt weigh in after
looking at precinct level data.
More later.
More Election 2004 Commentary From Steve Sailer
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Voters Give Non-Citizen Voting
Proposition An F [Joe
Guzzardi] -
11/03/04
Although immigration enthusiast
Senator Barbara Boxer won an easy victory over her
moribund challenger Bill Jones, there is good news from
California.
Proposition F which would have
permitted noncitizen (illegal alien) parents or
guardians of children in public school to votes for
candidates for San Francisco's Board of Education is
failing.
With 96% of precincts reporting,
Proposition F is being rejected 51 percent to 49 percent
Noncitizen voting for school board failing, SF
Chronicle, Charlie Goodyear
Wednesday, November 3, 2004
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Immigration Reform And The
Election [Joe
Guzzardi] -
11/03/04
One of the biggest triumphs of
Election 2004 for immigration reformers is the defeat of
Democratic House Minority Leader Tom Daschle. His
successor, former Congressman John Thune, is a moderate
on immigration.
Credit the Coalition for the Future
American Workers for playing a major role in Daschle's
downfall. The Coalition ran a series of ads in South
Dakota pointing out to voters that Daschle supported
amnesty. And predictably, Daschle
demanded through his
lawyers that the ads be retracted thereby calling
even more attention to his immigration double talk.
CFAW also ran ads in Texas against
Congressman Martin Frost that contributed to his defeat.
The Congressional Immigration
Reform Caucus will gain another member when Georgia
Republican State Senator Tom Price gets to Washington.
Price, endorsed by Congressman Tom Tancredo, ran
unopposed.
And also in Georgia Republican
Senator-elect
Johnny Isakson has compiled a favorable voting
record on immigration reform issues during his
Congressional career.
Congressman Tom Tancredo
won easily over pro-open borders Democratic
challenger Joanna Conti. Despite a heavily funded
all-out effort by immigration enthusiasts led by the
First Data Corporation, Tancredo's 60%-39% win
proves that money doesn't buy everything...at least in
Colorado's 6th District.
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