Brown vs. Bored
When Attorney General Martha Coakley won the Massachusetts Democratic  primary election for the seat held by the late Senator Ted Kennedy on  December 8, 2009 by nineteen percentage points over Mike Capuano, her  nearest rival, she and her supporters assumed the general election would  be a cakewalk.  This is understandable because the combined tallies of  Scott Brown and Jack Robinson, the only two Republicans running for the  seat, didn’t equal the votes amassed by Mike Capuano.
 
After  Scott Brown won the Republican primary, Martha Coakley and her  strategists assumed that, in heavily Democratic Massachusetts where Ted  Kennedy had held his seat for almost half a century, the general  election was in the bag.  In fact, she became so low-key some thought  she was bored with the campaign and cynically described the race as  Brown vs. Bored.
 
An example of how little effort went into the  Coakley campaign is found in the following statistics:  In the general  election Scott Brown’s campaign went out and found 7.18 times more  supporters than the 162,706 who voted for Republican candidates in  primary while Martha Coakley’s campaign could only acquire 1.59 times as  many as the 664,795 who voted for the four Democrats in the primary.
 
Given  those statistics, is this a national trend or was it a case of Brown  vs. Bored in Massachusetts–until it was too late?