During this historic election season one Central New Yorker has again found himself in the middle of the political fray. John Zogby is president and chief executive officer of Zogby International, a leading opinion research agency based in Utica, which conducts nationwide polling for major businesses and media corporations.
His latest book The Way We’ll Be: The Zogby Report on the Transformation of the American Dream (Random House, New York City; 235 pages; $26/hardcover), uses copious polling research and demographic statistics to identify “social shifts” which are “redefining the American dream.” A new crop of demographics is driving these changes, including the First Globals, the most globally oriented and tolerant generation in our history; the Secular Spiritualists, those who believe the American dream is measured in spiritual, not material, fulfillment; and the Investor Next Door, a new kind of American capitalist who focuses more on financial security than material accumulation, and who brings an increasing demand for social responsibility to his portfolio.
Zogby’s polling has proven remarkably prescient in the last three presidential elections. “All hail Zogby, the maverick predictor who beat us all,” proclaimed The Washington Post in November 1996 after Zogby alone called the re-election of Bill Clinton with pinpoint accuracy. Following his correct call in the 1997 New Jersey gubernatorial election, which Christie Whitman won, The Houston Chronicle exclaimed, “and the winner again is John Zogby.”
But the pundit hasn’t been perfect. One of his largest gaffes involved his missed call of the 2004 election, the one which burdened us with four more years of George W. Bush. On Nov. 2, 2004, Zogby’s poll showed John Kerry getting 311 electoral votes to Bush’s 213. Yeah, right.
Since the 1996 presidential election, Zogby, 60, has polled for the Reuters New Agency, NBC News, Fox News and most every daily newspaper in New York state. For this year’s election, Zogby International has partnered with Reuters and C-Span. Despite all this fanfare, Zogby says the high point of his life was his Oct. 28, 2004, appearance on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart; he was a guest again last Jan. 9.
A Central New Yorker all the way, Zogby holds degrees in history from Le Moyne College and Syracuse University. He has taught history at Utica College for 25 years and is a member of the Board of Trustees at Le Moyne. He is a senior adviser at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He is married to Kathleen Zogby, and they have three children, Jonathan, Benjamin and Jeremy. They live in Utica.
Q: Perhaps what is most interesting about your book is you are describing the melting permafrost beneath the power structures in this country. By sampling tens of thousands of ordinary Americans you were able to identify a consensus, which is much more practical and much more personal than all the omnipresent media megaphone spin. I wonder why anybody would think this is such a bad thing.
A: I don’t think there are very many people who believe this is a bad thing. I honestly believe that there are pockets of elites in this country who merely talk to each other and believe that Middle America is composed of ignorant, greedy, shortsighted and ill-tempered people. I have always felt enriched by talking to tens of thousands of people and living in a very real part of America.
Q: I can’t look at the media without being inundated by news about John McCain and Sarah Palin. Even critically negative coverage of these candidates is still coverage nonetheless. It seems as if Obama is mentioned as merely an afterthought much of time. Do your recent polls reveal Americans as having a perception of the McCain/Palin ticket as being a formidable juggernaut?
A: I don’t believe “juggernaut” is the correct term, but the McCain/Palin team is formidable and let’s make no mistake about it: John McCain is a very credible maverick and war hero. There was not a moment where I did not believe that he would be effective. The selection of Sarah Palin actually helped McCain by rallying conservatives, providing a fresh face and allowing McCain to do what he does best, which is not run as a red-meat conservative. This is a competitive race and for a while Palin has become the fresh face and stolen a lot of Obama’s flair. But I think lots of Americans have made up their minds and much of the TV news coverage is preaching to the choir on both sides.
Q: In his review of The Way We’ll Be for The New York Times, Joe Queenan called you a “Pollyanna if there ever was one, engaging in what is known as ‘reverse prognostication,’ a process whereby a pollster stakes his reputation on correctly prophesying events that have already occurred.” What do you have to say to this?
A: The fundamental flaw with the Queenan piece is that he can’t have it both ways. If this is “reverse prognostication” then it means these things have already occurred and are true, and if they’re true, then I am merely a reporter, not a Pollyanna. Another problem is that I submit lots of data. I don’t see any data backing up any of his contentions. The truth is I set out years ago to write a completely different book, actually about millions of Americans who I believed were giving up on the American dream. The more I polled and checked real behavioral data like retail figures, use of electricity and sacrifices made at home, the more I came away with a different book. I’m very proud of this work.
Q: The Way We’ll Be offers a compelling analysis of the generations currently alive today. Your assessment of First Globals {18- to 29-year-olds} asserts that they are trailblazers of a new bilateral global view which places humanitarianism and environmental friendliness over the more unilateral aims of acquisition, profit and patriotism. Concerning baby boomers, you identify the hedonism during the late 1960s as being a potential indicator at that time of the materialism which would come to define the 1980s. Can you spot any lurking characteristics of First Globals which might suggest they will pull an unlikely about-face in the coming decades?
A: As you know, I’m very high on these First Globals, but we have to remember that they still are 20-somethings. They are still consumed with how they look, what they buy and wear and very personal intimate things like relationships, careers and so on. That is just a part of the life cycle. I can assure you that this is what 20-somethings were consumed with up to Dec. 6, 1941the next day they became the Greatest Generation. Twenty-somethings today are probably spoiled and do have high expectations, and there’s always the risk that they may expect too much to come their way. But I do love their planetary sensibility.
Q: You describe First Globals as having a few similar social viewpoints as their elders who you call the Private Generation {people born between 1926 and 1945}. One particular topic these two generations can agree on is abortion as 54 percent of 20-somethings feel “it is in everyone’s interest to reduce the number of abortions.” Anybody over 30 who has eyes and ears will also notice that the drug culture has mostly come and half-gone. Do you think the tendency among First Globals to be more socially tame and conservative is unique to that age group or is it rather the consequence of years of aggressive messages from the Christian right and anti-drug campaigns which were mostly lost on Generation X?
A: I think that the First Globals provide a necessary synthesis to the warring extremes. Like the Nikes before them {Generation X}, they don’t have much reason to believe in institutions and leaders that seem to have let us all down. At the same time it appears that much of the Christian right leadership has just burned itself out. We see significant changes taking place among young Christian conservatives. I think a lot of the “socially tame” characteristics come from a group who really see so much of the world as their playing field and want to be ready for all the excitement.
Q: You admit in your book that you do not have a crystal ball but write that polling statistics do in fact “point the way.” In The Way We’ll Be you claim that Americans are fed up with polarization and yearn for a return to the workable center. What will you say if John McCain wins this election and our nation continues to veer further to the radical right?
A: I don’t believe that the country has drifted further to the radical right. I don’t believe that they were ever a majority, although that is how this past administration seemed to govern. The changes that I talk about are broad and are taking place and will continue to do so. Elections, on the other hand, revolve around other variables, too, like personality, trust, leadership, specific events. Suffice it to say, whether Barack Obama wins, this is already his moment and the nation’s moment. We will have an African-American presidentour demographics will continue to change and a new era of internationalism and a planetary worldview will continue unabated. So much so that a McCain victory also means moving the ball forwardon energy and the environment and campaign reform. The era of radical right leadership will have passed.
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