You might think that George W. Bush will be the overwhelming choice of shareholders in his bid for re-election. He cut taxes on capital gains and dividends while Kerry wants to undo them. The Democrats oppose limits on runaway lawsuits that decimate corporate profits. They also want to double-tax profits earned abroad and impose price controls on domestic health-care providers and pharmaceutical companies.
But the latest reading on the Rasmussen overnight polling survey of likely voters shows Kerry ahead of Bush 48 to 45 percent. This shocking result should be a wake-up call to the Bush campaign. Investors are a core Bush constituency. It seems that today?s higher gasoline prices and lower stock market averages are making for a nasty political mix that?s turning off investors to Bush.
Already, the Nasdaq has toppled 18 percent and the Dow and S&P have dropped 9 percent from their early-year peaks. Bush might still win despite these disappointing stock market figures. But if he does, he will buck the trend of the past four elections.
Over the first nine months of 1988 and 1996, stocks were up more than 10 percent in pre-election trading. Both times the party in power in the White House was re-elected: George H.W. Bush as Reagan?s heir in 1988 and Bill Clinton with a second term in 1996.
During the first nine months of 1992, however, stocks were about flat. Predictably, Papa Bush was defeated. In March of 2000 the stock market began a steady slide, thereby undercutting the Clinton-Gore prosperity argument and helping challenger George W. Bush win by a razor-thin Electoral College margin.
Should stocks continue to slide and oil continue to rise in the weeks running up to the election, it will be the handwriting on the wall of a Bush defeat.
While economists in both political camps are intensely arguing over jobs and the so-called middle-class squeeze, they ignore the electoral potency of the stock market. Two decades ago, only about one in eight U.S. households owned shares, so stocks didn?t really matter in political terms. Today nearly half of all households own shares, with almost two out of every three voters belonging to the investor class.