Centrist Democrats and far-left liberals are both shunning President Obama’s reelection campaign, according to a new donor analysis.
Buzzfeed reports on the findings of Stanford political scientist Adam Bonica:
"The 2008 donors who were most likely to give again in 2012 are those with ideological scores most similar to Obama's, whereas moderate-to-conservative donors and those on [the] far left are significantly less likely to re-up," Bonica said.
Bonica's model is based on a large swathe of publicly available campaign finance data. He examined all of Obama's $200-plus individual donors from 2008 and 2012, as reported to the Federal Election Commission. He then gave each contributor an ideological "score" based on his or her past political donations, with -2 being the most liberal and 2 being the most conservative. Once each of Obama's contributors had an ideological score, Bonica divided them into new, returning, and drop off donors before plotting them on comparative ideological graphs.
The story of Obama's failure to impress the ideological progressives who had hoped he'd pass single-payer health care and battle Republicans, is a familiar story. But Bonica's research suggests the degree to which conservative criticism has also eaten into Obama's core support, leaving the president fighting a two-front battle.