I don’t believe this is true at all, precisely because of the changing demographics. By, say, the 2020 election, I believe we will see a 10% spread, especially if the Republican party continues to remain insular and increasingly exclusive.
Anyway, congratulations to President Obama for a 332 EV trouncing of Romney and the Republicans.
Perhaps you are right. I agree that if republicans don’t realign themselves, that it is likely by 2020 the democrats would win by a big popular margin. We’ll see what road they continue to travel down.
But please, see my earlier post about Obama’s electoral vote count. For a democrat, 330 EV should be the bare minimum required to win
He narrowly carried Harris County, too, and carried 70% of the Latino vote in a state where Latino numbers are steadily increasing. A blue shift is probably a long ways off, but a shift from red to purple could happen.
Yeah, I’m a Harris County voter and I was almost certain that Obama wasn’t going to win our county this time, because he barely won it in 2008 when he got >7% margin of victory. The fact that he STILL won it in 2012 with a much closer margin speaks volumes about what’s happening, slowly but surely, in Texas.
If the GOP loses Florida in the long run then they are toast (and the demographics suggest it is purple now and may turn blue soon) then they have real problems on their hands. ANd if NC follows suit then the Dems can make 270 with just 14 states: CA, NY, IL, VA, OH, MI, PA, MA MN, WI, NJ, FL, NC, and MD
I’m guessing the same number of conservatives who were saying a Romney win would be a mandate for overturning public health care and who will now admit that Obama’s win must be a mandate in support of public health care.
Math has a noted liberal bias. In fact, perhaps the Republicans should start a drive to eliminate socialist math from classrooms. Then students would simply have to have faith that 332 is much, much smaller than 325, because they are told that it is true.
Honestly, this is the happiest thing I’ve heard all day.
Living in Red State is depressing. I was at an event a couple weeks ago and they took a “straw poll” of the audience. This was not a political event, it was an athletic event. Obama got a smattering of applause and Romney got a landslide. sigh
I live in the districts that voted in Ted Cruz and Steve Stockman. sigh
Obama winning was happy, but made me cringe to realize the whining I’m going to be subjected to.
Seeing that blue shift for Harris County makes me feel better.
I think it’s reasonable to project that during Obama’s second term, Fidel will shuffle off the mortal coil and US-Cuba relations will be normalized. With the right-wind Cuban vote neutralized and Obama getting credit, will a Republican ever win Florida again?
A valid question if that’s what happens, and Florida continues to trend blue (if it really is trending blue). According to these election results, Florida is still a center-right state (barely went to Obama when he won nationally by over 2%).
It’s worse than that for Republicans, though. Texas is already a minority majority state. Minorities don’t vote in proportion to their numbers, although that is becoming less true. While Texas went Republican by 58-42, the increase in the minority population will sooner rather than later drive the Republicans under 50%. In addition, the 2020 census will trigger a reapportionment in the state that will increase the number of Congressional districts winnable by Democrats. They won 12 of 36; by then they may win 22 of 40. That alone could be enough to swing the House Democrat.
There is no demographic pathway that doesn’t crush the Republican party in national elections if their policies and attitudes don’t change dramatically. (Triple negative score: add 50 points.) They will wish they only had a 10 percentage point loss. Landslides historically peak at around 61% (Roosevelt 1936, Johnson 1964, Nixon 1972) but that number would be in danger.
This projects linearly from today’s trends, which is always fatal in futurism. Something major but impossible to anticipate will happen. But Republicans need to have a talk with Dick Morris and wave some math in his face first. (John Mace, it was 303 EV without Florida, but Obama always appeared to be leading in Florida and Morris should have known that by the time he wrote that piece.)
Even if he didn’t know that (which he did), how is 303 a squeaker while his prediction for Romney which was about 20 votes more was a landslide? Morris is a hack, and stupid to boot.
The point here isn’t that Republicans are screwed forever and ever because all the trends favor the Democrats and that can’t be changed, it’s that they really don’t have a choice about moderating their views on some issues. You can slice and dice it a lot of ways, but right now they simply have fewer votes they can count on and they need to move some states (like the big above-listed ones) in their direction.