Since Friday, the national political conversation has been dominated by a debate over the importance of President Obama’s statement, at a White House press conference, that “The private sector is doing fine.”
Unfortunately, most of the media discussion has focused on strategy rather than policy. At The Washington Post, Chris Cillizza led off a Sunday column with the assertion that “gaffes matter” in shaping election outcomes. Two days earlier, his Post colleague Karen Tumulty described the president’s remark as a “gift” Obama had “handed to Republicans.” (As both Cillizza and Tumulty noted, Obama’s point was that the private sector is faring better than the public sector, where state and local governments continue to shed jobs.)
These claims are representative of the way journalists routinely promote the importance of these sorts of pseudo-controversies, even though there is little convincing evidence that gaffes affect presidential election outcomes. The problem is particularly acute during the summer doldrums between the end of the primary campaigns and the party conventions. As we’ve seen, a bored press corps with space to fill can easily lose perspective.
Contrary to Cillizza and Tumulty’s claims, however, there is no evidence that the president has been damaged by the incident thus far. As Emory’s Alan Abramowitz pointed out by email, Obama’s job approval and trial heat numbers against Romney have not declined since the press conference. Consider this Gallup graph plotting three-day rolling averages of presidential job approval:

When we compare Obama’s approval from the three days before the “doing fine” statement to the three days afterward, we see that the proportion of Americans who approve of the job he is doing actually increases from 46% to 49%. Without further calculations, it’s not clear whether such a change is statistically significant given the margin of error on the polls, but the result is certainly inconsistent with the notion that the president has been hurt by the statement.
So if the “gaffe” has apparently not harmed Obama despite a steady stream of media coverage, why would we imagine that anyone will remember or care about this statement come Election Day? Cillizza, who previously defended the importance of the largely forgotten Etch a Sketch controversy, rallied to defend the significance of Obama’s gaffe, citing the way the media has amplified it and the Romney campaign’s efforts to portray it as “a window into what the president really thinks.” Tumulty similarly argued that Obama’s “gift” to the GOP is “likely to show up again and again in attack ads, conservative commentary and Republican stump speeches between now and November.” And National Review’s Ramesh Ponnuru placed a particular emphasis on negative advertising as the means by which the gaffe will affect the election, writing on Twitter that “the clip will be run over and over in ads to make basic Romney point that O[bama] has failed and doesn’t get the economic problem.”
Negative ads are indeed the most likely way that Republicans might try to make the quote salient in the fall. The problem, however, is that evidence for the effectiveness of negative ads is quite limited. The best experimental evidence suggests that the effects of television advertising decay quickly. Moreover, as Georgetown University political scientist Jonathan Ladd pointed out on Twitter, the relevant question is whether ads (or speeches or commentary) that exploit gaffes are more persuasive than the material Republicans would otherwise have used. How much will it matter if a Romney ad quotes the “doing fine” statement or, say, criticizes the stimulus or healthcare reform instead?
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"Gaffes"? It reveals more about his mindset. That was no gaffe. I always wonder why you feel it necessary to defend Obama and shill for him than to ask tough questions. You wouldn't be giving -- and I don;t think you have in the past -- cut Romney or any other Republican the same slack if he committed such a "gaffe." Please be professional.
#1 Posted by Dan b, CJR on Wed 13 Jun 2012 at 03:18 PM
Here's an alternative approach:
Why not devote more coverage to THIRD PARTIES?!
That's the height of a mix of laziness, "kingmaking" and other aspects of the worst of the Beltway Fourth Estate.
#2 Posted by SocraticGadfly, CJR on Wed 13 Jun 2012 at 04:19 PM
Dan's a bit right.
They're not gaffes:
http://angryblackladychronicles.com/2012/06/12/define-gaffe/
"First was the President’s. In theory, his statement that “the private sector is doing fine” was some sort of blunder. But it wasn’t. It was fact. Private sector hiring is up, private sector profits are up. But folks equate private sector to individuals...The real problem with the statement isn’t the statement itself, but the reaction from the left. They want to try to walk it back or change it.
Wrong move.
Just point out the facts – more hiring, more profits. And then point out that the private sector is not the whole economy. And that those profits aren’t being used to hire. That has nothing to do with the President and everything to do with businesses not getting those profits back into the economy in the form of wages. You want to fix this economy? Increase demand. How do you increase demand? Get more wages into the hands of consumers. It’s a pretty simple equation. And it’s why Republicans fail to improve the economy. As long as the folks at the top get their ever-increasing cut, screw wages for everyone else."
#3 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Wed 13 Jun 2012 at 04:23 PM
Actually, the Romney spokesman's Etch a Sketch comment has been cited in many subsequent news stories and columns and continues to be mentioned. While Brendan Nyhan thinks it was overhyped, it obviously connected with media folks' assessment of Mitt Romney and his campaign and it hasn't died away -- and it won't because Romney has a long and well-documented history of extreme "flexibility." Nyhan overlooks that a "gaffe's" importance depends on whether it ties in with a pattern of statements and acts by a candidate. No serious observer believes that President Obama believes the economy is doing just fine, and he's made many efforts to goose the economy. So comparing Etch a Sketch and Obama's remark is another case of false equivalence by Nyhan.
#4 Posted by Harris Meyer, CJR on Wed 13 Jun 2012 at 07:05 PM
Bravo. Nice to see a reality check on gaffe-gate.
#5 Posted by mary winter, CJR on Wed 13 Jun 2012 at 07:46 PM
CJR carries Obama's water once again.
Well, somebody has to do a little journalism around here, I suppose"
Obama's Approval Ratings Dip to Lowest Level Since January
"The telephone poll, conducted Thursday through Sunday, mostly followed a rough week for Obama's campaign capped by his remarks on Friday that the private sector of the economy was "doing fine.""
#6 Posted by padikiller, CJR on Wed 13 Jun 2012 at 10:51 PM
Two gaffes that had an effect: George Romney's remark that he was "brainwashed" and Michael Dukakis's answer, in a presidential debate, to a question about how he would react if his wife were murdered.
Another one that may have changed an election: Al Gore walking away from his lectern in a presidential debate to violate George Bush's space.
#7 Posted by Dan Kleinman, CJR on Thu 14 Jun 2012 at 01:36 AM
Gatekeepers lecture journalists on how to cover the president's trivial actions. Meanwhile, said gatekeepers completely ignore the president's foreign and domestic wars (especially the use of drones and other police-state tyranny against Americans).
#8 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Thu 14 Jun 2012 at 10:33 AM