THE BELL CURVE -- joseph n. bell
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Dick Lewis is an electrical engineer out of Stanford who got hooked on
computers very early on and was finally seduced into turning his hobby
into a vocation. Lewis, who lives in Newport Beach, uses his computer to
crunch numbers with the same pleasure and satisfaction he derives from
chamber music (he’s a past president of the Laguna Beach Chamber Music
Society) and the creation of esoteric limericks.
As a result of his sophisticated and remarkably accurate numerical
analyses, Lewis has been in demand for some years by the local press and
political managers to detect trends that make sense out of seeming
anomalies. He usually isn’t asked to interpret them, but he enjoys doing
that, too, because politics intrigues him almost as much as computers.
He laid some local numbers on me over lunch the other day, then added
some meaning to them that he wouldn’t want to bet the house on, but that
I would strongly urge local politicians -- as well as local citizens --
to weigh carefully.
Probably the most important is the growing disinclination of our young
people to vote -- and when they do, to register as independents.
“They seem,” says Lewis, “to be saying a pox on both your political
houses.”
The figures Lewis has assembled show that the voting age population of
Orange County went up 9.3% between 1992 and 1998, but voter registration
actually went down by 5.1% during the same period. Young people accounted
for much of this. There were 156,000 registered voters in the 18-25 age
group in 1992; six years later, 18-25 voter registration had shrunk to
118,000. Those are numbers our social science teachers might usefully
munch on.
“Not only are fewer young people registering,” says Lewis, “but those who
do are voting in steadily smaller numbers. As a result, both the average
age and median age of registered voters in Orange County are going up.
And the reasons, it seems to me, are indifference and apathy in our young
people, more than anger.”
This indifference isn’t peculiar to Orange County. A recent study
conducted by the U.S. Department of Education found that only one in four
of the nation’s 3 million high school seniors eligible to cast their
first votes next year have more than a rudimentary understanding of how
the American system of democratic government works. And indications are
that their voting record in 2000 will be even worse than the fewer than
20% of eligible voters in the 18-25 age group who voted in the last
presidential election.
Although that picture is relatively less grim among older voters, Lewis
is fascinated on this broader canvas with the switching that has been
taking place in the political declarations of Orange County voters. In
1992 registrations, Orange County Republicans outnumbered Independents by
4 to 1. By ‘98, it was 3 to 1, and presently it is 2.7 to 1.
But Democrats shouldn’t be breaking out any champagne because they have
also been losing ground to the Independents. As a result, their relative
strength against the Republicans has held steady at 3 to 2. Again, much
of this swing has been among young people; almost one-third are now
registered as Independents, up from 20% in 1992.
“It seems to me,” says Lewis, “that candidates in a close race should
give some extra thought to the independent vote and the potential in the
youth vote.”
And how would he suggest they do that?
“Both young people and independent voters of every age tend to be less
patient with the same old political baloney than older voters. So a
candidate with something fresh to say comes across much better with these
two groups. Look at Jesse Ventura. Isn’t he a case in point?”
Lewis doesn’t see a lot of encouragement in these numbers, however, for
local Democrats. “There are many fewer moderate Republicans than
conservative Democrats in Orange County,” he says. “Since Orange County
Republicans are much further to the right than local Democrats are to the
left, the Republicans aren’t likely to put up moderate candidates because
they can lose far more on the right than they will gain on the left. Tom
Campbell, for example, the moderate Republican congressman from Stanford,
probably couldn’t get elected in Orange County. But losing the right up
north didn’t matter.”
And what does that say about the chances of Democrats to unseat any of
Orange County’s entrenched Republican officeholders?
Lewis: “It says to me that the relative position of Republicans versus
Democrats is not likely to change in Orange County, and the only chance
for a conservative Democrat is to hold his base solidly and appeal to
Independents as well as the relatively small number of moderate
Republicans.”
Finally, as his parting shot, he likes to recall the interview with a
disinterested nonvoter who was asked to explain the difference between
ignorance and apathy, and responded: “I don’t know, and I don’t care.”
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a Santa Ana Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
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