PDA

View Full Version : Demographics: A Roadmap to 2012




bobbyw24
11-21-2011, 09:25 AM
Electoral analysts Ruy Teixeira and John Halpin of the liberal Center for American Progress will publish tomorrow a comprehensive demographic and geographic roadmap to the 2012 presidential campaign that political junkies of all ideological stripes will want to keep close at hand.

In their new paper, The Path to 270, the two correctly lay out, I believe, the critical dynamics that will likely tip the balance in both the Electoral College and popular vote next year. President Obama's biggest headwind, they argue, will be disappointment in his handling of the economy; his biggest tailwind will be ongoing demographic change that continues to bend the electorate in his direction.

After Obama's victory in 2008, I argued that he had assembled a "coalition of the ascendant": that is, he ran best among groups that were themselves growing in society, like minorities, the Millennial generation and college-educated whites, especially women.

Teixeira and Halpin draw on that concept to argue that the unbroken wave of demographic change makes it likely that these groups, which remain the most favorable to Obama, will constitute an even larger share of the vote in 2012 than they did last time. They project that the minority share of the vote will rise from 26 percent in 2008 to 28 percent in 2012, an increase commensurate with the average election to election rise since 1992 (National Journal reached a similar conclusion in its analysis, The Next America). And they project that college-educated whites will increase their share of the vote from 35 percent in 2008 to 36 percent in 2012. (Overlapping with both those trends, they calculate that 16 million more Millennials will be eligible to vote in 2012 than in 2008.) Whites without a college degree, the most solidly Republican component of the electorate, they expect to continue their generation-long decline, from 39 percent of the vote last time to 36 percent in 2012. (In 1992, when Bill Clinton was first elected, those non-college whites alone constituted an absolute majority of the electorate, 53 percent.)

By contrast, some Democrats fear (and Republicans hope) that even if more minorities and college-plus whites turn out to vote in 2012, they won't increase as a share of the overall electorate because so many older and blue-collar whites will turn out to vote against Obama in 2012, just as they did in 2010. That will be a critical variable. As this paper shows, even small changes in the electorate's composition could have huge impacts on Obama because amid such long-standing economic discontent it will be difficult for him to match his 2008 showings with any of the three big blocks in the electorate: minorities (who gave him 80 percent of their votes last time), college educated whites (47 percent) and non-college whites (40 percent).

http://decoded.nationaljournal.com/2011/11/a-roadmap-to-2012.php

Conza88
11-21-2011, 10:41 AM
There is no 'demographic' for liberty. As such, they are useless for someone whose goal is to spread the message of freedom. Ron doesn't change his message for anyone.

bobbyw24
11-21-2011, 11:07 AM
There is no 'demographic' for liberty. As such, they are useless for someone whose goal is to spread the message of freedom. Ron doesn't change his message for anyone.

Right--like when that "Latino Activist" at the CNN debated asked the candidates about what they were gonna do to help out "my 50 million fellow Latinos" and Ron Paul said I will help you the same ay I intent to help ALL Americans. The other candidates played the race/ethnic card of course.

Becker
11-24-2011, 05:38 PM
There is no 'demographic' for liberty. As such, they are useless for someone whose goal is to spread the message of freedom. Ron doesn't change his message for anyone.

because every human in every country already agrees with liberty, that's why there's equal oppression and equal freedom in every part of the world, no demographic, lol.