THE VANISHING VOTER:
Public Involvement
in an Age of Uncertainty
(Alfred A. Knopf Publishers, September, 2002)
Thomas E. Patterson
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Harvard University
Cambridge, MA 02138
During the 2000 presidential campaign with the
support of a grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts,
the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics
and Public Policy conducted the most exhaustive
study yet of citizen involvement in an election
campaign. From November 1999 to January 2001, we
surveyed 1,000 Americans once or twice each week.
In total, we ran questions on 99 surveys,
collected data on 97,797 respondents, and asked
several hundred unique survey questions.
This evidence was combined
with surveys and other materials from past
elections in an effort to better understand some
of the reasons why Americans have been losing
interest in campaigns. The period from 1960 to
2000 marks the longest ebb in voter turnout in the
nation’s history. Fewer voters are not the only
sign of waning interest. In 1960, 60 percent of
the nation’s television households had their sets
on and tuned to the October presidential debates.
In 2000, fewer than 30 percent were tuned in.The results of our study are
now available in a book written by Thomas E.
Patterson, the study’s co-director, who is the
Bradlee Professor of Government & the Press at
Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.
Entitled The Vanishing Voter: Civic Involvement
in an Age of Uncertainty (Knopf, 2002), the book says, for example:
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that the weakening of the
political parties as objects of thought and
loyalty has reduced the incentive to
participate, particularly among lower-income
Americans;
that modern campaign techniques are a
turn-off for some citizens who otherwise have an
interest in public affairs;
that attack journalism has
eroded trust and interest in partisan politics,
particularly among young adults;
that soft news has reduced
the level of election coverage which, in turn,
has reduced the frequency with which Americans
think and talk about the campaign;
that the frontloading of
the nominating system depresses not only turnout
but election interest, information, and
conversation in states with late-scheduled
contests;
that the declining
audiences for election telecasts are in part a
function of sharp cutbacks in the broadcast
networks’ coverage, which has reduced the number
who “inadvertently” tune to these telecasts;
that registration closing
dates and poll closing hours continue to keep
some Americans from exercising their right to
vote; and
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that Electoral College
strategies serve to depress turnout and other
forms of involvement (for example,
election-related conversation) in
non-battleground states.
The book’s concluding chapter includes policy
proposals that, if instituted by the parties,
candidates, the media, and policymakers, would
increase campaign involvement, not only on
Election Day but throughout the course of the
campaign.
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