Political Hotsheet
By

John Dickerson /

CBS News/ August 1, 2012, 6:14 AM

Could the election be over before it starts?


This post originally appeared on Slate.

Mitt Romney's Las Vegas field office was buzzing last week. The candidate wasn't there, but his white and blue campaign bus was. Volunteers who had worked a shift calling on voters or knocking on doors in the brutal heat were rewarded with a tour. They stood among the black leather banquettes in the back where the candidate rides and read the love note he left his wife on Valentine's Day. Back in the offices, Romney and Republican Party staffers shared windowless rooms working under color-coded maps of the state. Hovering over the entire operation was a poster in the lobby that greeted everyone. It simply read "92."

That's not the number of days until Election Day. That's the countdown until voting starts in Nevada. Today it reads 85, which is 18 days before Election Day. By the time the big day rolls around--Nov. 6--almost 70 percent of Nevada voters are likely to have marked their ballot. In 2008, only a third of the roughly 130 million nationwide ballots were early or absentee, but that number is expected to increase in this election in the 32 states where it will be allowed. Nevada is one of several early-voting battleground states along with North Carolina, New Mexico, Ohio, Florida, and Colorado. So many people vote early in those key states, it's possible that the election outcome could be determined before anyone steps into a voting booth on that first Tuesday in November

As my colleague Sasha Issenberg writes in his wonderful forthcoming book, The Victory Lab, candidates and political parties started paying more attention to the science of campaigning after the election of 2000. That close race proved that when the outcome is tight, every little bit helps. So campaign strategists dropped the folk wisdom and started paying attention to the eggheads to learn whether a house visit, a phone call, or a piece of direct mail is more effective in identifying and turning out voters, or whether all three can be just as effective if deployed at different times and in different ways.

(Romney speaks in London.)

Early voting is a scientist's playground for experimenting with these techniques because it offers so many days to try them out, perfect them, observe them, and adapt them if necessary. If you're hunting for one day, you want to perfect your shot. If you're hunting over three weeks, you can change your position, try different rifles, wait for the weather to change, and shoot like a sniper.

Campaigns spend years putting together lists of their voters, identifying who they are, and noting what issues motivate them and, in some cases, what methods are most successful in getting them to vote. When early voting starts, most states release a daily list of who has voted. Campaigns can check these lists against their party lists. They don't know how a person voted, but because they've usually been in contact with the voter--or they identified them at an all-night Romney rally--they can make a pretty good guess.

At the start of the early voting, Democrats in Ohio might ask the president to visit to encourage the base to bank their votes. Or, a campaign might hold a rally and give preferential seating to those who wear an "I voted" sticker. A surrogate might rally near polling places, an update on the "knock and drag" technique. When Sarah Palin did this in Nevada in 2010 she helped goose the local vote.  Once the most reliable voters are in the system, a subsequent candidate visit can be targeted at less-ideological swing voters.

(Obama signs the U.S.-Israel cooperation bill on Friday.)

Or, campaigns can know when to stop working a state and spend time in another. "In 2008, I knew that Obama had won the election a week before," says Michael McDonald, a George Mason professor who has studied voter-mobilization techniques and used the same analysis the campaigns did. "We took a look at the early vote in Colorado. and it was implausible that McCain could come back." (Obama officials hated this speculation because they worried it would suppress early turnout.)

As the daily vote tallies come in, campaigns know where to tailor their efforts: knocking on more doors in this neighborhood, sending a piece of direct mail about equal pay for women to that one, or just making people feel guilty. When we were by here last week, you said you'd vote. Some campaigns use a subtle form of coercion; they promise to stop calling and sending mail if people will just vote.

One of the benefits of all of these techniques is that it helps a campaign feel in control of its own destiny. A lot of campaign work can feel disconnected, but if you can measure your list against the number of people who have voted, you know you're getting somewhere. In some cases, this work could also be psychological make-work, wasting resources that could be used more productively. But campaigns have convinced themselves in the past few elections that they can squeeze enough new votes using certain techniques that it can make a difference. The Mitt Romney campaign worked the early vote so diligently ahead of the Florida Republican primary that it built the crucial firewall it needed against the advancing Newt Gingrich.

Banking votes early may change what used to be known as the October surprise--the late election phenomenon that favors one candidate. In the 2000 election, news broke just days before the election that George W. Bush had been arrested for driving while under the influence. His strategists say they saw a sharp drop-off in evangelical voters who would otherwise have been predisposed to voting for Bush. If those votes had been banked, the voters couldn't have jumped ship. This could be an argument for dishing your dirt on your opponent early, before he has his supporters locked in. Of course doing that gives your opponent time to recover, too.

On the other hand, if elections are close and each side turns out their base and locks in their vote, that could leave a small, highly persuadable group of swing voters remaining. They might be more susceptible to late-game tremors.

If early voting becomes more common, it may also change the way candidates in other races in the state have to behave. If the candidate at the top of the ticket is banking votes at the start of the early-vote period, do you spend resources trying to ride that wave? If you do, you might not have money left to make a final push when you need it most. Say, for example, on Election Day.

More from Slate:

If we're truly serious about stopping massacres like Aurora, we need to cure our addiction to evil
Even Sandy Weill Has Rejected Megabanks. Why Won't Mitt Romney?
How did mass murderers operate before the advent of modern weapons?

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
17 Comments Add a Comment
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realist2O1O says:
From an economic standpoint, the process of taking from one group that rightfully should pay more and giving to another group that rightfully should receive more encourages the recipients of that spiritual generosity to vote for the right leader. Therefore President Obama has already won a second term.
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TimeToEvolve says:
by Thy_Almighty_King July 27, 2012 2:06 PM EDT
Could the election be over before it starts?
With the harm Obama has done to the USA, it could

So what harm are you talking about? Did you already forget the 8 year nightmare of the last Republican administration? Do you realize we were losing 750,000 jobs a month after Bushoccio? Under the Bush Cheney Crime Family unemployment, poverty and lost factories all went up. Bush took and budget surplus and turned it into the largest budget deficit of all time. Miss that, huh?
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USisforallraces replies:
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To these dumb GOPs loosing 750,000 jobs a month don't matter to them, neither does GDP of -6.4 when Obama took over, BUT suprise! suprise!!....to these **** brains +1.5 GDP and 80,000 jobs created in a month is like the world is coming to an end!.

Talk about triple standard/bigotry.
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TimeToEvolve says:
People have already forgotten the complete nightmare of the Bush Cheney Crime Family. The wars based on lies, the welfare for the rich and the economic meltdown. They want another dose of a failed Republicon administration. It is true, you cannot cure stupid.
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SD92040 replies:
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True. You cannot cure stupid. If you could the Democrat party would cease to exist. Obama took a bad economy and made it much worse. Promising welfare to all, by stealing the wages of people that actually work might play with the weak minded but its a sure loser in November. Maybe if the Dems move back to the center they might win elections again.......someday.
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wiscondave says:
If the majority of american voters are doing as well or better than four years ago, Obama should win. If not, he should be thrown out with the trash. We'll all see in november.
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SD92040 replies:
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Its gonna be a landslide. Just like Nov 2010.
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qyeteye says:
RNC / GOP sold its soul, lost its way, and big-money messages you to now follow their "leader".
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TimeToEvolve says:
I would suggest that everyone just keep asking the same question over and over. What is RobMe's actual plan? For that matter what is the actual Republicon plan to help the 99%? I have not heard anything different than what the nightmare George Bushoccio had going. And we are STILL trying to fix that damage.
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cubscout09 says:
When I saw the headline I was actually hoping that the British Government was threatening to lock Romney up for "outing" their chief intelligence officer.
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cntrygirl3 says:
It isn't just the early voting it is also how successful the Republican ID laws are going to be at suppressing the vote. This is particularly true in Pennsylvania evidently the Republican legislative leadership there thinks it is enough. This along with the Florida purge of the voter rolls (up to 20% of the people removed were eligible voters). It might not be such a bad idea for people to vote early just to know if they can.
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csuresh says:
OK guys if you are so sure about Obama then explain why Romney is leading by a point nationwide and by 10 points on economy? And this is in spite of him putting his foot in the mouth in London.
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formerlyluvnut replies:
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I don't know what poll's you are referring to but the ones I see show Obama leading as well as his approval rating is quite high. Oh well, we will see in November! I don't really care either way; it's been the same political crap for all of my 60 years & it will never change.
TimeToEvolve replies:
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Just let the Second George Bushoccio keep talking. His true arrogant, racist and shallow mentality is showing more and more.
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TimeToEvolve says:
Even in spite of the massive Wall Street money trying to appoint the next George W., you can't cure the wacked out conservative brain. Don't try to educate yourself or you neighbors. Just make as much money as you can for yourself no matter where you get it. Pander to the frightened extremists who want more war and want corporations to run their lives for them.

RobMe is the the poster boy for a failed Republicon ideology which is becoming more clear with each passing day. At some point someone is going to ask you for an actual idea or plan, Mittens and GOP.
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