The Bifurcation of the American Electorate

schmidlap

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Oct 30, 2020
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How the Diploma Divide Is Remaking American Politics

Education is at the heart of this country’s many divisions.

Blue America is an increasingly wealthy and well-educated place.
Throughout the second half of the 20th century, Americans without college degrees were more likely than university graduates to vote Democratic. But that gap began narrowing in the late 1960s before finally flipping in 2004...
A more educated Democratic coalition is, naturally, a more affluent one. In every presidential election from 1948 to 2012, white voters in the top 5 percent of America’s income distribution were more Republican than those in the bottom 95 percent. Now, the opposite is true: Among America’s white majority, the rich voted to the left of the middle class and the poor in 2016 and 2020, while the poor voted to the right of the middle class and the rich.
There are worse things for a political coalition to be than affluent or educated. Professionals vote and donate at higher rates than blue-collar workers. But college graduates also comprise a minority of the electorate — and an underrepresented minority at that. America’s electoral institutions all give disproportionate influence to parts of the country with low levels of educational attainment.
And this is especially true of the Senate. Therefore, if the coalitional trends of the past half-century continue unabated — and Democrats keep gaining college-educated votes at the expense of working-class ones — the party will find itself locked out of federal power. Put differently, such a development would put an increasingly authoritarian GOP on the glide path to political dominance...
Education polarization is not merely an American phenomenon; it is a defining feature of contemporary politics in nearly every western democracy. It is therefore unlikely that our nation’s white-supremacist history can fully explain the development. And though center-left parties throughout the West have shared some common failings, these inadequacies cannot tell us why many working-class voters have not merely dropped out of politics but rather begun voting for parties even more indifferent to their material interests.
... [E]ducation polarization cannot be understood without a recognition of the values divide between educated professionals and working people in the aggregate. That divide is rooted in each class’s disparate ways of life, economic imperatives, socialization experiences, and levels of material security. By itself, the emergence of this gap might not have been sufficient to trigger class dealignment, but its adverse political implications have been greatly exacerbated by the past half-century of inequitable growth, civic decline, and media fragmentation...
Across national boundaries and generations, voters with college degrees have been more likely than those without to support legal abortion, LGBTQ+ causes, the rights of racial minorities, and expansive immigration. They are also more likely to hold “post-material” policy priorities — which is to say, to prioritize issues concerning individual autonomy, cultural values, and big-picture social goals above those concerning one’s immediate material and physical security. This penchant is perhaps best illustrated by the highly educated’s distinctively strong support for environmental causes, even in cases when ecological preservation comes at a cost to economic growth...
The Republican Party's abandonment of its libertarian proclivities and embrace of authoritarianism is attracting the less-educated.

What can the Democratic Party do to win them back?
 
Republicans have convinced their voters to eschew education, which is a strategic move that has paid huge dividends: They have not only dumbed them down, they have convinced them that they can't trust the media, either, so they turn to rightwing outlets, which feeds them disinformation and makes a negative feedback loop that half of the country can't get out of.

I don't know how you can reach these people, but the Democrats have to work towards building a platform that is no longer wonky and esoteric but one that can penetrate the bubble these folks reside in.
 
The Republican Party's abandonment of its libertarian proclivities and embrace of authoritarianism is attracting the less-educated.

What can the Democratic Party do to win them back?
This is not something that can fixed quickly. This could take many years.

The first thing the Democrats need to do is recognize and admit that they have played a role in pushing people away, right into the waiting arms of the GOP. And this will have to fade with time, even if they started today.

The main, and huge, mistake they have made is their ongoing commitment to their old foibles, political correctness and identity politics. I said this a long time ago, 2016:

The party needs some new blood right now.

Maybe less fixated on burkas, birthday cakes, bathrooms, safe spaces and BLM, and more on jobs, growth and security.
 
Republicans have convinced their voters to eschew education, which is a strategic move that has paid huge dividends: They have not only dumbed them down, they have convinced them that they can't trust the media, either, so they turn to rightwing outlets, which feeds them disinformation and makes a negative feedback loop that half of the country can't get out of.

I don't know how you can reach these people, but the Democrats have to work towards building a platform that is no longer wonky and esoteric but one that can penetrate the bubble these folks reside in.
:blahblah::blahblah::blahblah::blahblah::blahblah:
 
This is not something that can fixed quickly. This could take many years.

The first thing the Democrats need to do is recognize and admit that they have played a role in pushing people away, right into the waiting arms of the GOP. And this will have to fade with time, even if they started today.

The main, and huge, mistake they have made is their ongoing commitment to their old foibles, political correctness and identity politics. I said this a long time ago, 2016:
The Democratic Party is preferred by younger, better-educated Americans.

As younger Americans inherit the nation, their social idealism and embrace of the nation's increasing diversity augers well.

Confronting the growing economic inequality must be a priority if grievance-driven politics and democratic election denial are to be overcome.
 
With all those wonderful Liberal Arts degrees. :auiqs.jpg:
Screen Shot 2022-10-20 at 9.03.44 AM.png
 
The Demographic Party is preferred by younger, better-educated Americans.

As younger Americans inherit the nation, their social idealism and embrace of the nation's increasing diversity augers well.

Confronting the growing economic inequality must be a priority if grievance-driven politics and democratic election denial are to be overcome.
Well, I'd think that most of the GQP's aggression right now is designed to mitigate and minimize the inevitable demographic changes that are coming.

But at the same time, the Dems need to remember that an important part of America's demography -- Hispanics -- are more conservative than has been assumed.

I think the Dems would be making a big mistake if they make any assumptions or extrapolations about the future. They have to earn votes every day now.
 
The Democratic Party is preferred by younger, better-educated Americans.

As younger Americans inherit the nation, their social idealism and embrace of the nation's increasing diversity augers well.

Confronting the growing economic inequality must be a priority if grievance-driven politics and democratic election denial are to be overcome.
Anyone voting for a democrat is stupid, or a criminal.
 
Well, I'd think that most of the GQP's aggression right now is designed to mitigate and minimize the inevitable demographic changes that are coming.

But at the same time, the Dems need to remember that an important part of America's demography -- Hispanics -- are more conservative than has been assumed.

I think the Dems would be making a big mistake if they make any assumptions or extrapolations about the future. They have to earn votes every day now.
Translation: We're getting desperate.
 
A more educated Democratic coalition is, naturally, a more affluent one. In every presidential election from 1948 to 2012, white voters in the top 5 percent of America’s income distribution were more Republican than those in the bottom 95 percent. Now, the opposite is true: Among America’s white majority, the rich voted to the left of the middle class and the poor in 2016 and 2020, while the poor voted to the right of the middle class and the rich.
That's what the article says, but apparently this issue is controversial. Here's a tally done in a College study:
incomeparty.png

There are a lot of factors that can cause this. Examples, Republicans are older and older people are richer than young people. More whites are republicans and whites make more money than other races. A lot of possibilities but what we know is that many say Republicans are richer.
 
The Democratic Party is preferred by younger, better-educated Americans.

As younger Americans inherit the nation, their social idealism and embrace of the nation's increasing diversity augers well.

Confronting the growing economic inequality must be a priority if grievance-driven politics and democratic election denial are to be overcome.

Nope. You're even losing the younger generation as well.

My kids, aged 25 and 23, are conservatives now. And their large groups of friends are most certainly not Democrats. Their economic prospects, inflation, gas, and rent have driven them away from the Democrats. Oh, and Biden. They detest and loathe Biden.

ETA: this is borne out in my state, MI. yes, by far more young people "identify as Democrats", but virtually no Indys are breaking for Dems this year. If you combine Republican and Independents, that's 53% of the 18-29 yo vote. Whereas Dems are 47%. And how motivated are those young Dems this year?

 
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The Democratic Party is preferred by younger, better-educated Americans.

As younger Americans inherit the nation, their social idealism and embrace of the nation's increasing diversity augers well.

Confronting the growing economic inequality must be a priority if grievance-driven politics and democratic election denial are to be overcome.
You people always confuse education with intelligence.
 
The Democratic Party is preferred by younger, better-educated Americans.
With all those wonderful Liberal Arts degrees. :auiqs.jpg:

And looking to the taxpayers to bail them out of their student loans, because they can't make enough by flipping burgers and bagging groceries to pay for their PhD in Gender Studies.
 
What can the Democratic Party do to win them back?
Absolutely nothing. The over-educated and indoctrinated types on the Left have nothing to offer those of us in the common sense, hard working, individualist types who make up the Right end of the political spectrum. We ARE addicted to our God, our Guns, and the original reading of the Constitution of the United States. Unless Democrats get on board with those ideals , they will never get our support.
 
You people always confuse education with intelligence.
Shmidlap has neither.

When the sheeple post these sorts of articles, they are simply looking for validation. Since their very sense of identity is derived from their unquestioning allegiance to their tribe, when they seek to establish that their tribe are the elites and the other tribe the unwashed, they are simply trying to reinforce their own imaginary superiority.

You see, when these posters cannot establish their superiority by displaying any reasoning ability, political acumen or even a scintilla of intellect, they have no other resource but to claim such superiority by claiming "my tribe is better than yours, nyah, nyah, nyah!".
 
Nope. You're even losing the younger generation as well.

My kids, aged 25 and 23, are conservatives now. And their large groups of friends are most certainly not Democrats. Their economic prospects, inflation, gas, and rent have driven them away from the Democrats. Oh, and Biden. They detest and loathe Biden.

ETA: this is borne out in my state, MI. yes, by far more young people "identify as Democrats", but virtually no Indys are breaking for Dems this year. If you combine Republican and Independents, that's 53% of the 18-29 yo vote. Whereas Dems are 47%. And how motivated are those young Dems this year?

Almost everytime a democrat claims something it's a lie.
 

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