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stu2002
12-18-2009, 09:04 AM
The March of Diversity
The Minority Population Is Both Growing And Dispersing. Fewer And Fewer Congressional Districts Are Predominantly White

Story By Ronald Brownstein, Graphic By Charlie Szymanski

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Even when Republican Tom Davis first won the Virginia congressional district centered on affluent Fairfax County during the GOP's 1994 landslide, the area wasn't a lily-white, Leave It to Beaver suburb. But at that point, minorities were the rainbow sprinkles on a mostly vanilla cone: Nonwhites represented slightly less than one-fourth of the district's population.

In the redistricting that followed the 2000 census, the Virginia Republicans who controlled the process modestly altered the seat to incorporate more white Republican-leaning voters. Yet, by the time Davis retired in 2008, the district's flavor had been radically changed by a steady influx of Asians, African-Americans, and Hispanics, many of them well-educated entrepreneurs drawn by Fairfax's burgeoning high-tech economy. By 2008, Fairfax public schools were sending home official notices in seven languages (including Korean and Urdu), and Census Bureau figures showed that the minority share of the district's population had soared past 42 percent. Davis, a skilled and moderate politician, might have navigated these changes for years. But when he stepped down last year, another skilled moderate--Democrat Gerald Connolly, the chairman of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors--captured the seat, easily defeating a Republican who outspent him.

Story Continues Below Graphic

http://www.nationaljournal.com/njonline/no_20091219_6555.php