OPINION

BRENDA LOOPER: Law of the letter

Brenda Looper
Brenda Looper

Back in high school, I took four years of advanced math courses, with all A's. It took my first semester in college under a master's candidate teacher with a chip on her shoulder to wipe the quadratic formula from my mind forever and make me actually hate algebra. (Sorry, Mr. Clark.)

But no matter. For the work I do, algebraic calculations aren't really necessary. What is is at least some understanding of reality, logic, and human behavior. And a little bit of statistics.

So let's take on a complaint aired by a few people about the balance of liberal versus conservative letters on the Voices page. The argument goes that the president won 60.6 percent of the vote in Arkansas, so the letters should reflect that.

Except ...

This argument assumes that the balance of letters coming in is the same as the vote, which it's not. We have been receiving more liberal and disgruntled conservative letters than we have supporters of the president, generally by a ratio of about three to one, but sometimes closer to five to one. The letters that don't make it in are usually for the same reasons: not following the rules, falsehoods stated as facts, etc.

It also assumes that no one who voted for the president could have possibly changed his or her mind about him. C'mon. Opinions are rarely static, though some will stubbornly cling.

Morning Consult polls 5,000 Americans daily on the president's approval rating, and found that, "Since Trump took office, his net approval in Arkansas has decreased by 19 percentage points." (For comparison, his net approval--the gap between approval and disapproval--in Alabama has decreased 8 points from inauguration to now; it currently stands at 28, with 62 percent approval.) In January 2017, his approval rating in Arkansas was 59 percent, versus 29 percent disapproval, for a net approval of 30 percent. In February of this year (the last update for state numbers), it stood at 54 percent approval and 43 percent disapproval, for a net approval of 11.

Clearly, opinions change over time. Across the nation, the president went from being slightly underwater in approval in five states in January 2017 to now being mildly to seriously underwater in 23 states (Vermont, especially, which went from -2 to -39 net approval, is not a fan). On his covid-19 response, his net approval in the U.S. has fallen 18 points since mid-March, which shows that, sometimes, opinions shift more quickly. As of last week, 49 percent disapprove, while 45 percent approve of his performance. The margin of error is 2 points.

So why aren't more of the president's supporters writing in? Well, I couldn't tell you, but the tendency here seems to be, especially in the last decade or so, that people less enamored of the president, no matter who it is, are the ones most likely to send in letters. During the Obama administration, we had plenty of letters railing against him, and as long as they followed the rules, they were printed. Those that were inappropriate for family publications (oh, there were lots of those) and that stated falsehoods as fact were the ones most likely to be tossed. It's the same now as it was then.

Except maybe with more crankiness. Both me and the letter-writers.

I can only say what other letters editors across the United States have said, summed up by Paul Thornton of the Los Angeles Times in noting complaints from Trump supporters about "publishing more letters that criticize the president than speak approvingly of his job performance. My simple response to that is what it's always been: We can only publish what we receive, and the opinions of our letter-writers skew decisively against the president. The coronavirus outbreak has exacerbated this trend." Sure, that's California, but as FiveThirtyEight's aggregate of polls shows, current approval of the president averages 43.8 percent.

I can offer tips like being sure to couch statements as your opinion, using attribution, and the like, but I can't use different rules for people according to what politician they support. Not only would that be unfair to everyone, it would be needlessly complicated and likely require the use of spreadsheets and complex mathematical formulae that would make no sense in putting out a daily newspaper and would likely irritate the stuffing out of me and everyone else. I'm cranky enough already.

When planning pages, we have to take into consideration what letters we get each day while allowing for reactions to news events and differing word counts; whether so-and-so is a RINO or feeds his dog the cheap dog food (don't do that; your dog deserves more than fillers) makes no difference.

We'll keep doing our part here to get in a representative sample of the letters we receive (keyword: receive). You can do your part by following the rules (one letter per 30 days, no anonymous letters, no poetry or copyrighted material, no obscenity, no personal or business disputes, etc.) and, for heaven's sake, sending in your letter with permission for it to be printed.

I can only do so much. The rest is up to you.

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Assistant Editor Brenda Looper is editor of the Voices page. Read her blog at blooper0223.wordpress.com. Email her at blooper@adgnewsroom.com.

Editorial on 04/22/2020

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