What Happened on Election Day?

News subtitle

Four professors reflect on a watershed election in a Rockefeller Center panel.

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Post-election panel sponsored by the Rockefeller Center
The post-election panel sponsored by the Rockefeller Center included, clockwise from top left, moderator Justin Anderson and professors Jennifer Lind, Jason Barabas 鈥93, Brendan Nyhan, and Anna Mahoney. (Photos by Katie Lenhart) 
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Four 天美麻豆 political scientists answered probing questions on Friday about how, despite predictions of a razor-thin margin in the race for the White House, former President Donald Trump decisively defeated Vice President Kamala Harris, discussing such issues as immigration, foreign policy, and cultural issues.

One of the panelists, , the James O. Freedman Presidential Professor in the , said there was 鈥渁 broad swing鈥 of GOP victories 鈥渁cross geographies and constituent groups.鈥

Sponsored by the, the panel discussion was viewed by 200 attendees in Filene Auditorium and and was moderated by Senior Vice President of Communications , a former ABC News senior producer, editor, and reporter. Panelists included Nyhan; , Rockefeller Center director and professor of government; Associate Professor of Government ; and , the Rockefeller Center鈥檚 executive director and a lecturer in government. 

Nyhan said polls cannot reliably forecast close election results that fall within surveys鈥 margins of error, and that they can be out of step with current trends. 鈥淢ost of our quantitative understandings of how people decide who to vote for are from this historic period of stable, low inflation. And so we didn鈥檛 maybe understand as well as we do now how much people hate inflation,鈥 he said.

Before tackling hot-button issues that appear to have propelled Trump to victory鈥攁mong them, immigration, inflation, isolationism, trade tariffs, and culture wars鈥擬ahoney cautioned against reading too much into 鈥渨hat was an unusual campaign to begin with.鈥 

鈥淪o we have Donald Trump, who I think everyone can agree is a sort of nontraditional candidate that is not necessarily articulating really coherent policy views and is appealing in different ways,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut on the other side, we also had the unusual situation where Joe Biden was the nominee for a long time, and then he stepped down. The way the vice president became the candidate was atypical, and she had a shorter period of time to the ballot box.鈥

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天美麻豆 student Kavya Nivarthy '25
Economics major Kavya Nivarthy 鈥25 asked about an anti-incumbent tide in elections both in the U.S. and around the world in developed countries. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)

Asked to assess the role of misinformation in the outcome, Nyhan said fears about a misleading artificial intelligence blitz on social media turned out to be unfounded. But he sharply disputed Trump鈥檚 false claims that immigrants are responsible for a spike in crime. 鈥淭hat kind of misinformation can generate real harms offline,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd it may be used to legitimize or motivate this mass deportation operation that鈥檚 been discussed.鈥

Turning to foreign policy, Lind predicted Trump would withdraw U.S. support for Ukraine. 鈥淭hat will influence Ukraine鈥檚 calculations about should it keep fighting this war and what to accept as peace terms with Russia,鈥 she said.

On NATO policy, Lind believes Trump鈥檚 advisers will have a 鈥渕ix of views鈥 but that he will continue to upbraid NATO members for underpaying their dues. 鈥淓urope really is going to be forced to invest more in its own strategic autonomy,鈥 she said.

How much of Trump鈥檚 sweeping agenda will be accomplished through legislation will depend on the balance of power in the U.S. House, which, as of Sunday, had not yet been determined but was trending toward the GOP. If Republicans control both chambers, and the Supreme Court remains favorable to the Trump administration, Barabas said, 鈥淚 think you鈥檇 see more legislation than anything before. Some people may like that direction, and some may not.鈥 

During an audience Q&A, the panel fielded questions on a range of issues that divided the electorate. Noting that Trump is 鈥渁n atypical Republican,鈥 Barabas said his anti-immigration stance could worsen the labor shortage, forcing 鈥渟ome decisions about the business community versus really following through on the mass deportations.鈥

Similarly, Lind said that Trump鈥檚 plan to impose tariffs on foreign goods would be inflationary, 鈥渁nd so to impose that kind of burden on workers doesn鈥檛 strike me as a smart move.鈥

On the future of reproductive rights, Mahoney said, 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 very possible with a unified Republican government that there would be attempts for a federal ban on abortion, although we saw, on Tuesday, several states reaffirming abortion access, even in some unlikely places.鈥 

When a student asked about another battlefront in partisan culture wars, transgender rights, Nyhan said, 鈥淭rans folks are a really vulnerable group. It is also the case that it is a wedge issue that is not working to the Democrats鈥 benefit. I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 the reason they lost, but it鈥檚 part of a bundle of issues that we鈥檒l be seeing in the data.鈥

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Government professor Brendan Nyhan speaks with students
Government professor Brendan Nyhan talked with students after the panel on Friday night in Filene Auditorium. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)

Widening the lens, Kavya Nivarthy 鈥25, an economics major and vice president of the , asked the panel how much weight to put on an anti-incumbent effect, not just in the U.S., but worldwide, in recent elections.

鈥淥ne statistic I saw after the election that really left an impression on me was that this year is the first year since World War II in which every governing party in a developed country lost vote share,鈥 said Nivarthy. 

鈥淲e are seeing a phenomenon across the developed world of frustration or dissatisfaction with institutions and existing major parties, and that鈥檚 created an opening for so-called anti-system parties around the world,鈥 Nyhan answered. 

In the U.S., he said, 鈥淧eople express very little trust in a political system. They don鈥檛 like government. Donald Trump forced Democrats into being the embodiment of defending the status quo and the institutions that Americans generally dislike.鈥

顿补谤迟尘辞耻迟丑鈥檚 2024 Election Speaker Series continues on , the John H. Watson Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, and Keith Whittington, the David Boies Professor of Law at Yale Law School; on , senior political data reporter and host of CNN鈥檚 Margins of Error; and .

Charlotte Albright