性视界

Pollster Joins Maxwell School Panel to Explore Super Tuesday and Beyond

The 2024 presidential race between frontrunners President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump is the 鈥渉ighest intensity, lowest interest鈥 race Maxwell alumnus John Zogby G鈥74 said he has seen in his 40-plus years of leading national public opinion polls.

head shot
John Zogby

While the candidates are nearly neck and neck in recent polls, Zogby says a high percentage of voters remain undecided, 鈥渘ot because they don鈥檛 know anything about Joe Biden or Donald Trump.鈥 He added, 鈥渢hey鈥檙e undecided because they鈥檙e not sure they鈥檙e going to vote.鈥

Zogby shared this perspective during a March 1 State of Democracy lecture organized by the Maxwell School鈥檚 Campbell Public Affairs Institute. Titled 鈥淐ampaign 2024: Super Tuesday and Beyond,鈥 the event was held over Zoom and, in addition to Zogby, featured a panel of Maxwell political science faculty members: Shana Kushner Gadarian, professor and associate dean for research; Baobao Zhang, assistant professor; and Mark Brockway, assistant teaching professor.

Grant Reeher, professor of political science and Campbell director, moderated the 90-minute conversation, starting with a question for Gadarian: 鈥淲hat do you think is the most important thing that our viewers should have at the forefront of their minds, at this point in the election cycle鈥攕omething that they should remember or keep an eye out as we head into Super Tuesday?鈥

Gadarian said voters ought to consider what issues are important to them and help steer the conversation among candidates to those issues. 鈥淥ne of the things that would be good to keep an eye on are what are the policies that voters say they care about,鈥 she said, later adding, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not simply about who鈥檚 ahead in the polls, it鈥檚 about the policies that American government can affect.鈥

Brockway echoed the sentiment. 鈥淧oliticians want you to pay attention to issues that they want you to pay attention to, not necessarily the issues that are important to your life and the lives of people around you,鈥 he said.

Zhang said she is concerned about the impact of artificial intelligence on the election 鈥渁nd lots of other elections going forward.鈥

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to give you a doomsday scenario saying AI is going to ruin everything, but it will make certain things more challenging,鈥 said Zhang, who is a senior research associate with the Autonomous Systems Policy Institute and one of 15 scholars from across the U.S. chosen to serve in the inaugural cohort of AI2050 Early Career fellows. 鈥淔or instance, recently in New Hampshire, we have seen this case where someone used a robocall to spoof President Joe Biden鈥檚 voice telling people to abstain from voting.鈥

While the Federal Communications Commission has since banned such calls, Zhang said the issue of deep fakes and false information will no doubt play a role in the campaign season, especially on social media. She encouraged voters to 鈥渟tay vigilant, check the source,鈥 and, 鈥渋f it seems like a viral thing that is becoming increasingly popular, make sure that before you hit the share button, to verify that it鈥檚 actually factual information.鈥

Zhang, who recently received U.S. citizenship and registered to vote, then pivoted to voter turnout. 鈥淣either of the candidates are really super popular among the public right now,鈥 she said.

Later in the conversation, Zogby shared the response he received from fellow Arab Americans, polled in Michigan ahead of Super Tuesday. They were in a 鈥渉ell no, we won鈥檛 go鈥 stage, he said. 鈥淚n this instance you hear Arab Americans saying, 鈥榃e voted for Joe Biden and we like his stance on infrastructure and the money that has come into Dearborn, you know, we like his stance on this and we like his stance on that, but we鈥檙e not going to vote for him this time because of his stance on Gaza.鈥欌

Gaza, Zogby said, has become a 鈥渨edge issue,鈥 even among Democrats. 鈥淛ust on that issue alone, we have folks that are going to say, 鈥榃e don鈥檛 have a candidate out there,鈥欌 he added.

Reeher pointed out that this is the first election in which both frontrunners have held the nation鈥檚 highest office. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got two four-year records to compare,鈥 he said, asking the panelists if it changes the dynamics of the election in any way.

Zhang said she teaches statistics and noted that accurate comparisons are impossible when conditions are not controlled. Because of the public鈥檚 tendency to be biased toward more recent events, voters may be more focused on what has occurred during Biden鈥檚 presidency, she said.

Brockway agreed, adding that Trump has an advantage in being able to shape the narrative about his more distant presidency. While she agreed that Trump may benefit from voters鈥 鈥渕emory hole,鈥 Gadarian said the Biden campaign can benefit from comparisons in how both handled COVID-related policies pertaining to health and the economy.

Zogby said he used to be able to 鈥済o to the bank鈥 on the polling question 鈥淎re things generally headed in the right direction or the wrong track?鈥 But hyperpolarization has persisted since the election of George W. Bush. He said since the election of Trump and through the Biden presidency, a high percentage of polled Americans say we鈥檙e on the 鈥渨rong track.鈥

Reasons run the gamut. 鈥淲hile there is indeed economic growth and all the economic indicators that we鈥檝e traditionally relied upon are pointing in a very positive direction, there鈥檚 the Dobbs decision鈥擱oe v. Wade; there are climate disasters; even with FBI reporting that crime鈥攅specially violent crime鈥攊s going down, the perception is different,鈥 Zogby said.

The top issue among voters, currently? 鈥淭oday it is immigration,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what the No. 1 issue is going to be six months from now.鈥

Organized by the Campbell Public Affairs Institute at the Maxwell School, the Lecture Series provides a forum for meaningful discussions of public issues that cut across traditional disciplinary boundaries. The next event in the series is March 22 and will feature Pratap Bhanu Mehta, the Laurence S. Rockefeller Visiting Professor for Distinguished Teaching at Princeton University, for a talk titled 鈥淒emocracy, Authoritarianism and Nationalism: India in Comparative Perspective.鈥