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GOP Voters Confused? Experts Say Give Them A Break

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MALCOLM RITTER   02/24/12 09:58 AM ET  AP

NEW YORK — Romney? Gingrich? Santorum? The Republican race for the presidential nomination is like a game of musical chairs. It makes you wonder what's going on in the heads of voters as they cast their primary ballots.

But give them a break. Choosing a candidate in a party primary is fundamentally more complicated than in a general election, experts say.

Scholarly research into how voters choose a candidate in primaries is limited, compared with studies of voter behavior in the general election. But as major contests loom in Arizona and Michigan on Tuesday, with Super Tuesday following on March 6, experts agree that voting in primaries is a challenging task.

For starters, you can't simply vote your party. "People use party as a cue extensively in voting," says political scientist David Redlawsk of Rutgers University. It's "the simplest piece of information we normally have. ... Not having that party cue really makes it much more difficult for voters," including independents.

Other complications:

_There are more candidates to consider than just the two leading nominees in November.

_Voters know less about primary candidates than they'll hear later on about the eventual nominees.

_There are generally fewer differences among those candidates than a voter will see between a Republican and Democrat. People who spend a lot of time studying the policy differences "might in fact find themselves more confused than better informed," Redlawsk says.

As his Rutgers colleague Richard Lau sums up in an analysis of the 2008 nominating process, "Voting in primary elections is downright hard."

In fact, Lau's research concludes that voters in primaries and caucuses often do barely better than chance in choosing the candidate who best represents their own values and priorities. (He says voters do far better when the general election rolls around.)

Plenty of party members just stay home; turnout is usually lower than in the general election. That leaves the task to those who are the most interested in politics and their own party.

So what makes a primary voter choose one candidate over the others? Lau says that has proved hard to pin down, but others have some ideas.

Samuel Popkin of the University of California, San Diego, author of a forthcoming book about presidential politics called "The Candidate," says primary voters often face conflicting goals.

"One of the things we know is that there's a constant tension all the time between the ideal and the practical," he said. "You want somebody who's pure and clean and ideal, yet somebody who knows how to wade through the swamp and clean up Washington.

"You want two things that are somewhat incompatible," said Popkin.

Voters want somebody who agrees with them on the issues they care about, although as candidates introduce themselves they need not be very specific about what they'd do if elected, notes Arthur Lupia of the University of Michigan. Voters can get worked up about a bad economy if they see it in their own lives and they hear the government is responsible for wider economic troubles, he said.

And voters also ponder who can win in November. That and the issues were on the mind of Matthew Coker, 20, a political science major at the University of Memphis who cast his first vote ever in a presidential primary the other day. His ballot, filled out in early voting in Tennessee, went for Mitt Romney.

"I want a president that understands economic freedom and understands that the market is best left alone by the government," said Coker. And as for electability, he said he thought Romney would connect with crucial moderate voters better than Rick Santorum or Newt Gingrich because of "the leadership he demonstrated as a conservative Republican governor of a Northeastern blue state, Massachusetts."

Voters care about leadership, trustworthiness, compassion and intelligence, although being too intellectual can hurt a candidate, says political science professor Jon Krosnick of Stanford University. They get hints about that from watching televised debates and campaign events, he said.

In fact, debates have become more influential as their number increases and clips show up on YouTube, he said. Some of their punch comes from news media conclusions that a certain candidate performed strongly or weakly, judgments that can sway voters without a strong preference, said John Geer of Vanderbilt University.

Similarly, a poorly known candidate can pick up support by winning primaries, because that attracts news coverage, usually positive, Geer said.

The news coverage played a role for Mark Fratella, a 34-year-old algebra teacher in Chicago. At various times he favored Romney and Gingrich, but finally settled on Santorum for the upcoming Illinois primary.

"My wavering at the beginning seemed to go with whoever was the front-runner at the time, just because of the coverage," Fratella said. The media attention finally prodded him to focus on Santorum, and what he found "resonates with me."

Candidates are also helped by endorsements from iconic organizations that voters trust – a "huge" help in a race that lacks party labels, Lupia said.

So as all this information flows in, how does a voter weigh it and come to a decision? It's a mix of the conscious and unconscious, gut feeling and rational consideration.

Experts debate whether voters consciously know why they voted for one candidate over another, Redlawsk said. One school of thought suggests voters combine information about each candidate in sort of a mental ledger to produce an overall impression, he said, but once that's done, they forget the specific information that influenced them.

"We take into account a lot more information than we can report back later when we're asked," he said.

In any case, many experts say that for all the challenges, primary voters do a fairly good job of choosing.

Although Lau's study suggests their votes don't always go to the "right" candidate, even a "wrong" candidate is probably not very different, Redlawsk says.

Popkin calls the primary system "amazing," a process that weeds out "Johnny-one-notes" and lightweights.

"I think it works better than people realize."

___

Malcolm Ritter can be followed at http://www.twitter.com/malcolmritter

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NEW YORK — Romney? Gingrich? Santorum? The Republican race for the presidential nomination is like a game of musical chairs. It makes you wonder what's going on in the heads of voters as they ca...
NEW YORK — Romney? Gingrich? Santorum? The Republican race for the presidential nomination is like a game of musical chairs. It makes you wonder what's going on in the heads of voters as they ca...
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09:57 PM on 03/01/2012
Andrew Breitbart :
YOU WERE, ARE AND ALWAYS SHALL BE WE THE PEOPLE'S HERO !
R.I.P.
LADY TRUTH HAS LOST HER FEARLESS GLADIATOR KNIGHT !
MAY YOUR MEMORY GUIDE USA TO CHOOSE A TRUTHFUL LEADER
AND NOT BE BLINDED BY THE POWER OF MONEY AND LIES.
WE LOVE YOU !
Reposted by We The People !
07:42 AM on 03/01/2012
If I were a Republican, I'd be confused too. This is the absolute worst crop of Presidential candidates ever to raise their hand to run.
06:59 AM on 02/29/2012
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FORCE PRIESTS TO USE CONDOMS WHILE SODOMIZING LITTLE BOYS!!!
PROTECT CHILDREN FROM STDs!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MekhongKurt
10:36 PM on 02/29/2012
HuffPo: if you can erase this trash and ban the poster for good -- many thanks.
10:53 AM on 02/27/2012
How can a writer even mention Newt Gingrich with a straight face whilst ignoring the very existence of Ron Paul? In the (open) Virginia primary next week there will only be two candidates on the ballot: Hawk vs Dove. The big money counties surrounding DC will heavily favor Romney, but Republicans and non-Republicans statewide can take this opportunity to send a message to the corrupt cores of both parties that we know that our imperialistic foreign policy is bankrupting the nation -- morally and economically.
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05:26 PM on 02/24/2012
i'll give them a break when they give President Obama a break! when do you propose that will be???
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noygdb
republiCANTS cant do anything but create fear
04:25 PM on 02/24/2012
boy that word "experts" sure gets tossed around casually
04:01 PM on 02/24/2012
Funny that this article is on the Huffington Post when all the have been doing is portraying the Republicans as clowns. Give me a break.
05:11 PM on 02/24/2012
The reason the republicans come across as clowns is because that's what they are. The snippets that I see from their debates make me cringe. How anyone can support them is mind-boggling.
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05:27 PM on 02/24/2012
if it walks like a duck, and quakes like a duck......
Javalation
Laughing in a Daydream
03:58 PM on 02/24/2012
For conservatives who oppose limits on markets and businesses, Romney is your man. He demonstrated all of the characteristics you admire. He cheated the people he bought companies from, paid no regard to their employees, sometimes scammed lenders, lobbied congress to get additional tax breaks for venture capitalist and all to maximize profits for himself that he is still reaping to the tune of $50,000+ a day, money for nothing. Yeah, we need more Robber Barons.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Darwincrat
My God only exists if you believe too.
03:42 PM on 02/24/2012
Their heart says no to Mitt Romney, but their TV says yes. And we all know which channel its on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cubanmom
Another Woman against the GOP-Taliban
03:39 PM on 02/24/2012
What an ignorant statement from the 20-year-old who was quoted in the above article as saying "he wants a president that understands economic freedom and understands that the market is best left alone by the government"! Really? Because of GOP deregulation we had the 2008 Economic disaster! The GOP while in control of Congress (1994-2007 when the Dems took a slight majority) did a lot of deregulating which led to the Mortgage Crisis, the Banking Crisis, and the meltdown on Wall Street. Some of the fail-safes that had been in place since the Great Depression have been removed and its a free-for-all on Wall Street! Regulations keep those who are dishonest and prey on small investors in check!

We DO have a FREE economy, and we must bring back some regulations that will protect us all from the disasters that happened in 2008!
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noygdb
republiCANTS cant do anything but create fear
04:26 PM on 02/24/2012
don't forget the S&L debacle of the 80's..guess which party was in control then?
11:24 PM on 02/25/2012
I think Glass Stegal and the Fed being empowered to break the law with impunity is more to blame.
psandysdad
The older you get, the more excuses you have.
03:33 PM on 02/24/2012
Anyone who votes GOP must be confused.
03:44 PM on 02/24/2012
Or very rich.
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etherboss
I'm just here to waste time
04:11 PM on 02/24/2012
Or both.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ethiopia1a
The COMMA Sutra,,,,making grammar sexy since 1875
03:21 PM on 02/24/2012
Mitt has foreign policy experience like Palin did.
He can see the Cayman Islands from his yacht
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Phyllis Yanagihara
Still believing in common sense and courtesy
03:29 PM on 02/24/2012
too funny!
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jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
03:53 PM on 02/24/2012
I love your sig. Have you checked out Batwing? I heard someone talking about the storyline on the radio, it sound interesting. I generally like most of the "Batman Inc" stuff, they get kind of creative with the theme.
03:05 PM on 02/24/2012
I already knew that the other three were windbag haters but I was shocked when I heard Ron Paul, libertarian show his true colors. Apparently he only believes in liberty for men and I believe only for white men. He sure thinks government needs to get into our personal lives and control our morals. Not saying we don't need to become a little more moralistic but that is an individual path that we all have the freedom to choose. It is not for the government to force upon us, especially Republicans who even complain about childrens movies. They would control every aspect of your life. God gave us free choice. In the end we will answer to him about our choices, not our government.
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03:01 PM on 02/24/2012
The literal 3 stooges were funnier and smarter than this pack of clowns.
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02:58 PM on 02/24/2012
Republicans are lucky if they are able to wipe themselves never mind figure out Saddam never attacked US.
03:03 PM on 02/24/2012
And this 'wiping' is going to become more challenging, as print media go electronic ...

Snerd
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03:59 PM on 02/24/2012
Bada -BING!