Now granted, George W. Bush did lose the popular vote to Al Gore by a half percentage point (47.9 to 48.4), but for Obama to win by seven points instead of a half point eight years later with the same percentage of white voters is pretty amazing. I’m as big a believer as anyone in the “EDM” theory (Emerging Democratic Majority) that demographics is destiny; but I didn’t think it was happening quite *that *fast. Anyone got a source of hard data to either confirm or refute this?
Looks close, according to this source: 2000 election and 2008 election. Obama won 1 more point amongst whites vs. Gore, while whites dropped from 81% of the electorate to 74%. Obama’s margin in other demographic categories seems much improved over Gore as well.
Keep in mind the demographic information is all based on exit polling.
Thanks, algorithm! Boy, this really puts a context behind the fury of the “Tea Party” (conservative old white people), and their “I want my country back” lamentations. This has (had) always been a “white man’s country”, and though whites are still a majority (albeit not for long), a coalition of nonwhites, women, and young people were strong enough to wrest the power away–which totally freaks them out.
I hadn’t heard the Bush/McCain comparison, but I have heard a McCain/Reagan comparison.
The concept that the tea party is terrified of losing ‘their country’ is true. I think that is why the GOP is pushing voter suppression as a last ditch means of maintaining power. They know demographic trends are pushing them into minority status (people born after 1978 and non-whites aren’t very pro-GOP), and they want to delay it as long as possible. In the 2012 election as many as 5 million people will not be able to vote due to all the voter suppression efforts.
Supposedly by 2020 millennials and non-whites will be over 51% of the electorate.
I enjoy watching Republicans react to all this by paradoxically becoming more and more extreme in their far right purity instead of trying to adapt to changing demographics by moderating. As you say, they can fight this rear guard action for a bit, but it’s all going to massively collapse at some point fairly soon, and I’ll be popping the popcorn and enjoying the show (as I did in 2008). It may even be this fall: prognosticators are increasingly giving Democrats a chance to win back the House, while keeping the Senate and White House. But if the GOP does manage to eke out a win, it will be a last gasp or close to it.
The term varies but means people born after 1978 (or 1982 in some definitions), so as of 2012 the electorate between the ages of 18-34. Generally speaking on economic, statist, science and social issues they do not agree with the GOP.
Yup. And keep in mind that there is more than one voter-suppression tactic. IMHO, the stripping of convicted felons of their voting rights (which, I think varies from state to state) is worse than voter-ID shenanigans.
I have seen many people wonder WTF is the deal with the proliferation of felony crimes in the USA, every new cyber bulling law or whatever are all felonies. Then you remember being convicted of a felony is a path to disenfranchisement and it starts looking like class warfare.
I agree with you in general about the push for voter suppression, but I think you’re wrong about them trying to “delay it as long as possible”. They don`t seem to be nearly that self aware.
I think the most iconic example conceivable is when Glenn Beck kicked off some stupid campaign to “define the future” at a nursing home/retirement home. Nobody wants to feel irrelevant but I hope when I’m living in a retirement home I’ll have enough perspective to realize I’m not going to be defining the future.
I don’t think angry older white Americans have that perspective.
Yeah. Depriving ex-felons of voting. making it harder to vote. Making it harder to register to vote. Making early voting harder. Making absentee voting harder.
but hopefully (hopefully at least) these tactics will make people distance themselves from the GOP even further. The further the GOP goes into all on base mode where all they do is appeal to the 20% of the electorate who are their base the faster this will be over.
He announced his 100 year plan for the Future at The Villages in Florida on Nov 26, 2009. The press release mentions The Villages but it doesn’t really emphasize it, but he was there telling a bunch of elderly people that they need to plan out the country’s next 100 years.