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The Bradley Effect Was About Guns, Not Racism

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  • The Bradley Effect Was About Guns, Not Racism

    THE BRADLEY EFFECT WAS ABOUT GUNS, NOT RACISM
    Joe Mathews

    New America Foundation
    http://www.newamerica.net/publications/ articles/2009/bradley_effect_was_about_guns_not_ra cism_17339
    Sept 8 2009

    California Journal of Politics and Policy | 2009 Asked why he won,
    Deukmejian said he thought he was the stronger candidate, but mentioned
    the absentee vote program, too. He paused. "I think it was the gun
    control initiative," he said.

    About These Icons Asked why he won, Deukmejian said he thought he
    was the stronger candidate, but mentioned the absentee vote program,
    too. He paused. "I think it was the gun control initiative," he
    said. Related Programs: New America in California

    Nelson Rising, chairman of Tom Bradley's 1982 campaign for California
    governor, still remembers the phone call. Bradley called him shortly
    after 4 a.m. on a long election night, when it was clear Bradley had
    lost to Republican attorney general George Deukmejian.

    "You were right," Bradley told Rising a bit wearily.

    With those words, Bradley, the Democratic mayor of Los
    Angeles, acknowledged that a political mistake had cost him the
    governorship. And, despite all the theories that the election produced
    a "Bradley effect"--a supposed secret racist vote undetected by
    polling--the mayor himself knew that his loss had different causes.

    The main cause was guns. Against Rising's advice, Bradley had endorsed
    Proposition 15, a statewide ballot initiative that would have put
    a freeze on purchases of new handguns. Bradley and Proposition
    15 both had a lead in the polls when Bradley decided to back the
    initiative. But there was a huge backlash against Proposition 15
    in conservative California precincts. The resulting turnout was so
    overwhelming that it took down Bradley--just as Rising had predicted
    in a campaign meeting months earlier.

    "I will never forget that meeting," Rising recalled. "I said,
    'I don't own a gun. I don't intend to own a gun. If I could design
    a world without guns, I would. But Tom, if you support this, you
    can't win.'" The mayor's other political aides were less worried
    at the time. Prop. 15 had a lead in the polls in the early fall,
    and so did the mayor. "The view was that it was a win-win," Rising
    recalled. What's more, Bradley, a former L.A. cop, believed strongly in
    gun control. But Prop. 15 had become a rallying point for Deukmejian,
    and helped bring out unexpectedly high turnouts in inland California,
    where shooting and hunting were very much a way of life. This surge
    in turnout changed the shape of the electorate. Surveys at the time
    showed that 35 percent of California's registered voters had a gun
    in the house. Among those who cast ballots in November 1982, nearly
    half were gunowners, according to exit surveys.

    "Without Tom Bradley endorsing Prop. 15," said Steve Merksamer, who
    served as campaign chair for Deukmejianand as the governor's chief
    of staff, "we would have lost."

    When the 1982 contest is recalled today, it is often assumed that
    pre-election polls showing a Bradley victory were wrong because
    of race. But there is no clear evidence of that. Last fall, when
    some commentators were suggesting a "Bradley effect" could explain
    presidential candidate Barack Obama's lead in the polls, I examined
    surveys and news stories from the 1982 race, and talked with more
    than a dozen major players in both the Bradley and Deukmejian
    campaigns. Only two expressed any belief in the idea that the 1982
    California governor's race saw a "Bradley effect." And even those two
    campaign workers, former Bradley aides Phil Depoian and Bill Elkins,
    maintain that without Prop. 15, Bradley almost certainly would have
    won anyway.

    "Today, when I hear very intelligent people talking about the
    Bradley effect as if it actually happened, I just scratch my head,"
    said Rising. "If there is such an effect, it shouldn't be named for
    Bradley, or associated with him in any way."

    According to those who were there, the real lessons of the Bradley
    campaign involve the dangers posed by divisive issues and by
    a candidate's own allies. Bradley's campaign suffered three
    self-inflicted wounds it could not overcome.

    The first, of course, was guns. Proposition 15, which put a cap on
    gun ownership, had been qualified for the ballot by men who were
    Bradley's friends; chief among them was John Phillips. Prop. 15
    proposed to limit the number of pistols in private hands in the state
    to the number legally owned as of April 30, 1983. Only law enforcement
    personnel could buy new guns.

    Some Bradley aides said they tried to convince Phillips to wait
    and qualify the measure for a later election, so as not to hurt the
    mayor's campaign. Phillips, later an attorney in Washington, didn't
    remember any such appeals.

    What Phillips remembered was having all eyes on him at the election
    night party at the Biltmore Hotel in downtown L.A. "Everybody blamed
    me for the defeat of the first black governor of California--I know
    Bradley felt that himself," said Phillips. Some people in the campaign
    still do.

    "Now, I always smile when I read about the Bradley effect," said
    Phillips, jovially. "Thank God I've been vindicated 25 years
    later. It's not my fault."

    The second wound: absentee ballots. The 1982 election in California was
    the first under new laws that made it easier to vote absentee. Voters
    no longer needed a specific reason--such as illness or a trip out of
    state--to request an absentee ballot. Democrats had lobbied for the
    changes, but Bradley's campaign did little to take advantage.

    Republicans, led largely by people involved in that year's U.S. Senate
    campaign of then-San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson, skillfully exploited
    the new rules by sending absentee ballot request forms to more than
    two million registered Republicans. The forms included an envelope
    with postage already paid.

    "I think it was significant," said Wilson, who served eight years
    in the Senate and two terms as California governor. "We figured,
    'We'll get a higher percentage of our registered voters to vote than
    the Democrats will get of their registered voters.'"The Republican
    strategy worked. Bradley won 19,000 more votes than Deukmejian among
    those who cast ballots in precincts. But Deukmejian won the absentees
    by more than 100,000.

    In a 1983 report on the election, pollster Mervin Field, who had
    predicted a Bradley victory based on exit polling, said this surge
    in absentee voting was the "primary cause" of the poor election
    night prognostication. Polling models had been based on an absentee
    vote similar to the 304,000 votes cast in the previous gubernatorial
    election in 1978. But in November 1982, more than 506,000 votes for
    governor came from absentees.

    Finally, the third wound: low African-American turnout. This was a
    three-part problem, involving black voters, regional rivalries and,
    some suggest, football.

    Bradley, wary of being seen as "the black candidate," didn't campaign
    in the black community and didn't do enough to turn out black voters,
    some aides recalled. "The position we took was, 'My God, this is
    a historical event and black folks are going to turn out as never
    before,'" said Bill Elkins, one of Bradley's closest aides. "And
    instead, the turnout did not reach the level we thought it would."

    In their turnout models, pollsters had expected that minority
    voters--black, Latino and Asian--would makeup 20 percent of the
    electorate. Post election estimates put the figure at just 15
    percent. Black turnout--in fact, Democratic turnout, in general--was
    lower than expected in the Bay Area. Campaign veterans on both sides
    of the race believe northern Californians didn't trust Bradley,
    in large part because he was mayor of their unpopular regional rival.

    Deukmejian told me in an interview last fall: "Tom Bradley was popular
    in southern California, but people throughout the rest of the state
    were not all that comfortable having someone who was mayor of Los
    Angeles as their governor."

    To make matters worse, Los Angeles, under Bradley, had lured away the
    popular Oakland Raiders football team that same fall. "It was about
    football," said Bill Norris, a longtime Bradley supporter who was a
    federal appellate judge at the time. "The turnout in black precincts
    in Oakland was below expectations, and I believe that's because of
    hard feelings that L.A. had stolen the team."

    Deukmejian's campaign avoided the subject of race, except at one
    crucial moment a month before the election. Bill Roberts, a campaign
    consultant, told a group of reporters that public opinion polls
    might not be picking up racial bias in the vote. Deukmejian dismissed
    Roberts from the campaign, but Roberts's comments, as much as anything,
    are responsible for the idea of a "Bradley effect."

    Some Bradley supporters thought Roberts's comments, while repudiated
    by Deukmejian, had an impact on the race. But pollsters and political
    pros said there's no clear evidence of that. Bradley, in fact,
    did well with white voters in urban and suburban areas, where gun
    ownership is lower. The Los Angeles mayor won relatively conservative
    San Diego County, quite a feat for a Democrat.

    In his postelection report, Field--while allowing that the gun issue,
    absentee votes and lower-than-expected minority turnout explained
    polling errors--clung to the idea that Bradley may have lost the
    election because of his race. Field based this view on a series of
    statistical extrapolations from the same exit polls that led to his
    faulty predictions on election night.

    More than three percent of Deukmejian voters indicated in exit polls
    that their vote was based on a desire not to vote for the black
    candidate. Field, extrapolating, estimated that the three percent
    amounted to 136,000 racist votes for Deukmejian. Exit surveys also
    found that 0.6 percent, or about 23,000 Bradley voters under Field's
    extrapolations, had voted against Deukmejian because of the attorney
    general's Armenian background. And finally, Field found that Bradley
    out-performed a typical Democratic statewide candidate by about three
    percent points among black voters. On that basis, Field estimated
    that Bradley gained16,500 votes because of his race.

    Throwing those figures together, Field said Deukmejianhad a net
    advantage of 96,000 votes from prejudice. Deukmejian won by 93,000.

    Field's view left hard feelings. Some former Deukmejianaides still
    blame Field for creating a lasting impression that there was something
    wrong with the election.

    Officials of both campaigns said their polls showed a tightening
    race. The Deukmejian tracking poll results, which his former of
    chief staff Merksamer keeps framed in his Sacramento law office,
    show a rapidly narrowing race. Bradley was up 12 on Oct. 7, up four
    on Oct. 14, and up just one point in the final tracking poll, two
    days before the election.

    "We thought it was going to be close," said Rising of the Bradley
    campaign.

    Setting aside the strange math, it's worth noting that the exit polls
    weren't wrong just in Bradley's race. In the U.S. Senate contest,
    public polls and exit polls also predicted an arrow victory for the
    Democratic candidate, the departing Gov. Jerry Brown. Wilson beat
    Brown by six points.

    Wilson recalled that the mood was dark at his election night
    headquarters at first, as the polling suggested he had lost, before
    the actual returns brightened spirits. Around midnight, Wilson talked
    by phone with Deukmejian, who said he'd lost.

    In an interview last fall, Deukmejian said election night was hard. "I
    was very, very dejected. And I was praying." Not wanting to hang out
    at the election night party and wait for what might be bad news, he
    went home to Long Beachand stayed up all night, listening to returns
    on a news radio station. He learned he had won shortly before dawn.

    Asked why he won, Deukmejian said he thought he was the stronger
    candidate, but mentioned the absentee vote program, too. He paused. "I
    think it was the gun control initiative," he said.

    Bradley, who died in 1998, didn't dwell on the defeat. He ran
    again in 1986, but was beaten badly by Deukmejian, then a popular
    incumbent. Depoian, who managed the 1982 campaign for the mayor, said,
    "Ten years later, if you were to ask Bradley what happened, he'd say,
    'I don't know. Maybe it was gun control.' He didn't talk about it. He
    was a very forward-looking guy.'"
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