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BBC: Domestic issues swing it for Democrats
BBC ^ | Wednesday, 8 November 2006, 10:39 GMT | Steve Schifferes BBC News

Posted on 11/08/2006 3:39:15 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach

Domestic issues swing it for Democrats

By Steve Schifferes


BBC News


Jim Talent and Claire McCaskill
Women's votes helped Claire McCaskill win in Missouri

The Democrats have recaptured the middle ground in their electoral victory in the mid-term Congressional elections.

And for many, bread-and-butter issues like the economy and corruption were as important as Iraq.

Key swing groups of the electorate have returned to the Democrats, according to exit polls and opinion polls conducted shortly before the results were announced.

Even if the Democrats do not recapture the Senate, it is clear that the Republicans must do better among these swing voters if they are to retain the presidency in 2008.

graph

The Democrats' success has been due in no small part to their ability to appeal to voters on issues that matter to them at home, and a perception that the Republican Congress has been ineffective and scandal-ridden.

Among the most important groups that have swung back towards the Democrats are married women - a key group that supported Mr Bush in 2004 - suburban voters, the elderly, and middle income voters.

Women voters

One of the most important factors in US voting is the "gender gap" - the tendency of Democrats to gain more votes among women.

In the past two elections however, while single women supported the Democrats, married women had moved towards the Republicans.

At this election, married women split 50%-49% to the Democrats, and women with children, and working mums, were 55% Democratic.

Women provided the margin of victory in the narrow Senate win for Claire McCaskill in Missouri, where stem cell research was an important issue.

Gains in the suburbs

Another key group was suburban voters, who represent nearly half the electorate, and where Republicans had been building up an advantage for some years.

Suburban voters broke 53% to 45% to the Democrats in this election according to exit polls, while the Democrats increased their advantage in large and small cities.

Many of the key Democratic gains in the House of Representatives were in suburban seats and small cities, ranging from the suburbs of Phoenix, Arizona (the 5th district), to Denver, Colorado (7th district) to Louisville, Kentucky (where longstanding Congresswomen Anne Northrup was defeated) to the suburbs of New York and Philadelphia.

Even in traditionally Republican rural seats, the Democrats were running neck-and-neck as a percentage of the overall vote.

Bob Casey in church
Bob Casey, an anti-abortion Democrat, won in Pennsylvania

Finally, this election represented a return of middle-income voters (making between $50,000 and $100,000) to the Democratic party.

The Democrats gained a 53% to 46% advantage with this group, which makes up nearly 40% of the electorate, and matched the Republicans with voters earning $100,000 to $150,000.

Economic issues played an important role in bringing middle and lower income voters back to the Democrats, especially in Midwestern states like Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania and Michigan, which have been hard-hit by an economic slowdown.

Polling data shows that many middle-income voters felt they did not benefit from economic growth in the last few years, and evidence suggests that there has been hardly any increase in real wages, despite the recent boom.

Key issues

Indeed, the exit polls suggest that the economy was seen as a 'very' or 'extremely' important issue by more voters than any other issue - and those voters went 60% to 38% for the Democrats.

election issue graph

And if this election was a referendum on George Bush and his conduct of the war, it is also clear from the polling data that disgust with Congress - and its corruption and sex scandals - was also an important factor.

The exit polls suggest that corruption was a very important issue to three-quarters of voters, which also broke strongly for the Democrats.

And the number who disapproved of how Congress was handling its job (62%) was higher than those who disapproved of how President Bush was handling his job (58%).

Those who thought Iraq was an extremely important issue also tended towards the Democrats.

There were only two issues - values (such as abortion) and immigration, where the Republicans had the advantage - but neither of these were as important to voters.

Religion and turnout

Another key factor in US elections has been the influence of religion on voting.

graph

Evangelical or born-again Christian voters, who make up one-quarter of the electorate, broke strongly for the Republicans in this election - although by a reduced percentage compared with 2002.

Their turnout may have been reduced by the corruption and sex scandals among Republicans, and concern that the Congress had not delivered on much of the conservative value agenda.

But Catholics, who also make up a quarter of voters, returned strongly to the Democratic party, with a 56% to 43% advantage for the Democrats.

This may have helped Democrats win house seats in Arizona and New Mexico as well as Senate seats in the rust-belt states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, where pro-life Democratic challenger Bob Casey won a big victory over incumbent Rick Santorum.

Hispanics, black voters, and secular voters also became even more partisan for the Democrats, reversing the hopes of the Republicans, who had some success in recent elections in reducing the Democratic lead, especially among Hispanics.

If the Democrats can continue to mobilise their traditional base, and appeal to the key swing groups, they stand a good chance of reversing the Republican tide of the past decade.

But this election was relatively unusual, in the sense that national issues, such as Iraq, corruption, and the economy, rather than local issues or personalities, dominated the results.

In the next presidential election, values and personalities could well return to play a leading role in swaying the voters.




TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2006
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1 posted on 11/08/2006 3:39:23 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: LS; Kenny Bunk

2 posted on 11/08/2006 3:43:13 PM PST by Shermy
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Domestic issues? What domestic issues, or any issues, did Democrats run on? I must have missed their agenda until today which is: dictate to business owners how much they pay and dictate to business owners where they can locate. They kept those nice pieces of socialism well hidden until the day after the election. Anyone notice the media's odd silence on not questioning why Democrats didn't unveil any of this previously?

And in terms of Democrats on corruption, spare me. They're acting holier than thou on corruption after they and their media friends covered up the corruption of the likes of William Jefferson and William Monohan were just re-elected in landslides and Abramoff's boy Harry Reid is elevated to majority leader and the Corruption King himself Bob Menedez also kept his Senate seat is absolutely laughable and beyond words.


3 posted on 11/08/2006 3:45:24 PM PST by MikeA (Where's the media to call the elections a "temper tantrum" by America like they did in 1994?)
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To: Shermy

Doesn't your chart just prove that the media won this election for the Democrats. The economy is healthier now than the 90s, unemployment lower than at Clinton's equivalent point in his presidency and incomes rose 7% AFTER inflation in 2006. Yet people voted out a Republican Congress because of the economy?? That tells me they were sold a bill of goods by the Clown Car Media on the state of this economy. It also tells me the White House was WAY too timid to take credit for the economy and to counter the lies the media was telling about it.

But this isn't where the media's absolute deceit and underhanded campaigning for the Democrats ended. Democrats caught up in scandal like Jefferson, Mollohan, Menedez and even Harry Reid (who took more Abramoff money and gave more quid pro quo in return than most any Republican you can name) were all either re-elected soundly or potentially elevated to Senate Majority leader The reason? The media all but ignored their scandals, (including the fact that Mollohan had to be removed from the co-chair position of the House Ethics Committee by the Dems. for rewarding campaign contributors with pork projects,) in some cases scandal more substantial than anything Republicans other than Duke Cunningham were caught up in.

Indeed, think of the sick irony of the NJ Senate seat where Jersites sent the absolutely corrupt Menedez back to the Senate with his storied past of corruption despite being under criminal investigation and yet turned out the squeaky clean Mike Dewine in Ohio to pay for the sins of Ohio's Republican governor guilty of 4 misdemeanors including the petty failure to report sports tickets given him.

So if Americans were turning out Republicans over corruption, then they did so with an amazing double-standard and not just a bit of hypocrisy. It's unfair really when you consider Republicans largely dispatched with their sleazeoids while Democrats just hid theirs in a backroom until after the elections, expecting and exacting zero accountability from them.

But one has to credit the media with that for ignoring Democratic corruption while hyping even mere allegations or the appearance of wrong with Republicans such as a raid on Curt Weldon's daughters home that in no way suggests guilt. Yet Weldon lost. Jefferson, Mollohan, Menedez, and Reid on the other hand had a good night last night.

You may call that America showing righteous indignation. That such indignation was applied solely to Republicans I call absolute dysfunction and ignorance by an electorate increasingly brainwashed by the Clown Car Media.


4 posted on 11/08/2006 3:49:05 PM PST by MikeA (Where's the media to call the elections a "temper tantrum" by America like they did in 1994?)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
"Women's votes helped Claire McCaskill

One can only assume that it was these Missouri Monsters (women) who voted to clone babies for experimentation.

Who are the Nazis (human experimentation)? Democrats and those who voted for them!!!

5 posted on 11/08/2006 3:49:05 PM PST by xtinct (I was the next door neighbor kid's imaginary friend.)
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To: MikeA

Exactly. They blew a bunch of smoke and fooled everyone.

They have a narrow majority based on a large number of narrow victories. Now they can't blame, they have to govern.

We need to let them think they have a mandate though and watch the boomerang effect in 2008.


6 posted on 11/08/2006 3:54:53 PM PST by Free Vulcan (Show them no mercy, for you shall receive none!)
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To: Shermy

Note though, the standard fraud of the pollsters: they separate "terrorism" from "Iraq," and many respondents link them. In that way, they make "economic issues" number 1, when clearly it is way, way below national security/terrorism/Iraq.


7 posted on 11/08/2006 3:56:33 PM PST by LS
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To: Free Vulcan

I like what you said about not being able to blame and now having to govern. That's exactly where they are now and they may face a situation of "be careful what you wish for."

But then, they have the media to cover for them and help them to blame any failings in government all on Bush rather than on them.

But I hope the Republican communications machine undergoes a drastic re-tooling so we can do an effective job of holding these pukes' and their feet to the fire. You wanted power? Then with that comes responsibility.


8 posted on 11/08/2006 3:57:52 PM PST by MikeA (Where's the media to call the elections a "temper tantrum" by America like they did in 1994?)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

NO, NO, and NO! Wrong! I am sick of this. It is all because of stinking lies from the left. No other reason.


9 posted on 11/08/2006 3:58:08 PM PST by ladyinred (RIP my precious Lamb Chop)
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To: All

Could some of you spare time to go to Kristinn's Gold Star Families in Iraq thread...

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1734425/posts

They could use our support now.


10 posted on 11/08/2006 4:04:22 PM PST by AliVeritas (Get out and vote. Yeah you, at the monitor, get off your duff and vote. Go GOP!)
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To: MikeA

The media did everything they could to get the democrats into office, but this wasn't just about domestic issues. The economy is doing great and jobs are plentiful.

This was about the Iraq war and years of the drive by medias 110% negative coverage. The MSM media and the democrats cordinating together to sell to the US that Iraq war policy needs to change.


11 posted on 11/08/2006 4:10:25 PM PST by Proud_USA_Republican (We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good. - Hillary Clinton)
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To: LS

Maybe, but at least this exit poll allows people to choose multiple.

There was a noted exit poll after 2004 that forced voters to pick one of only four, the infamous "values" poll. For two years wonks subjected us to the "values voter" issues! I see the amorphous "values" is one of the choices even on this poll!


12 posted on 11/08/2006 4:15:27 PM PST by Shermy
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Evidently the BBC thinks Iraq is a state in the western part of the United States.

If they're going to frequent on opium den before broadcasting, they should probably take more than a five minute break before going on the air.


13 posted on 11/08/2006 4:16:32 PM PST by DoughtyOne (Victory will never be achieved while defining Conservatism downward, and forsaking it's heritage.)
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To: MikeA

Yeah well, they ahve enough problems of their own. so why worry about what we are doing? Should they care?


14 posted on 11/08/2006 4:19:59 PM PST by dforest (be careful you don't become what you hate the most)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Don't you just love that picture of Bob Casey in church? The British press always ridicules any form of religiosity, yet they use THAT one to stick it to the Republicans.


15 posted on 11/08/2006 4:42:51 PM PST by SuziQ
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To: Shermy

The economy? I'm getting so tired of hearing this. The economy is BOOMING. Unemployment is virtually non-existent, if you want to work. More people own homes than ever before, inflation is non-existent, the stock market is up, and even gas is down. If America considers THIS to be a bad economy, they are in for a very rude awakening when their taxes go through the roof, inflation heats up and business starts getting slapped with even more crap that caused them to run overseas in the first place.

It is really sad. I remember the misery of the Carter years very well and a lot of people today I guess have short memories............

The dems are going to spend two years of investigations, witch hunts, and let's face it, they can impeach Bush and probably Cheney any time they get ready. Then they can stick Pelosi in the White House.

Immigration? All the illegals in this country will be given citizenship and within ten years that problem will have doubled if not more.

I don't even want to think about Terrorism because it's too scary to contemplate.


16 posted on 11/08/2006 9:47:30 PM PST by greccogirl
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To: greccogirl

"The economy? I'm getting so tired of hearing this. The economy is BOOMING."

For shareholders. Until the next crash.

"Unemployment is virtually non-existent, if you want to work."

?Where you live?

"More people own homes than ever before,"

Maybe, but the population is growing.

"inflation is non-existent,"

Huge myth. It's rampant. look at housing and energy. The Fed juices the stats by not including those and others in inflation stats.

"the stock market is up," good.. "and even gas is down." good.

"If America considers THIS to be a bad economy,"

It is compared to the 1990's.

"They are in for a rude awakening when their taxes go through the roof,"

Yes, Bush's deficit spending splurges we will have to suffer for in the future.

"inflation heats up and business starts getting slapped with even more crap that caused them to run overseas in the first place."

They moved overseas to lower labor costs. If the crap was unslapped you know what business' would do? They would move overseas lower labor costs. Blame diversions are for the suckers.


17 posted on 11/09/2006 10:38:51 AM PST by Shermy
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To: Shermy

Sorry but you are wrong. The economy that Bush inherited that was in recession after the dot com bust of the 90's and then made a roaring comeback after te 9/11 attacks is an amazing accomplishment.

I live in the south. Unemployment is low in the entire united states!

Considering that what we have had to overcome in the past six years, a war, a terrorist attack and the rest, we're doing fantastic.

Glad you are so happy, wait until you get your next tax bill.


18 posted on 11/09/2006 12:12:02 PM PST by greccogirl
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To: Vicomte13
More proof that your

Manufacturing labor's reasons for ire at the GOP SHOULD be obvious, but apparently aren't, so they should be stated.

Everyone hears how great the economy is, and it IS great...on the coasts, in the financial centers. But if you're in manufacturing, or in the services that cater to people in amufacturing. The economy sucks and is getting worse, because Republican-style "free trade" means the wholesale export of manufacturing jobs to Asia. There is no job that an American manufacturing worker does that a foreigner cannot do as well for half the price. And there are fewer and fewer crops, even , that can't be grown competitively elsewhere and shipped right into America.

That great recovery and low joblessness is a national average...financial services areas on the coasts have full employment. Manufacturing centers have massive job anxieties. And guess what? They all voted Democrat this time. Republican seats in places like Ohio and Indiana, and of course industry-heavy Pennsylvania, all flipped.

You even see it in the Northeast. There is ONE Republican Congressman left in New England. ONe. Chris Shays of Connecticut's 4th district, the Connecticut "Gold Coast" of financiers from the Greenwich hedge funds and Stamford corporate headquarters. THAT constituency is doing well. But right next door, in a district that is industrial/manufacturing Connecticut, the long-seated Republicans lost or are about to in the recount.

This also explains the black vote in Virginia and Ohio. Blacks are in the bottom half of the socio-economic ladder. Like EVERYBODY in the bottom half, they depend on Social Security and medicare for retirement. And as a group far more than others, they depend on the social safety net and public education.

Republican economic policies most threaten the security of blacks, and as a direct result, even when there are good black Republican candidates on the ticket, the blacks STILL break overwhelmingly for Democrats. And no, it's not because they're brainwashed idiots. They understan their economic sitatuion well, and the Republican policies address it least.

So, put together alienated Hispanics, blacks, and manufacturing workers, and hard economic drivers turn those areas with high concentrations of any of the three Democrat Tuesday night.

It's still the economy, stupid, but Republicans are in the upper, financial, half of it, doing well, and don't really see the effects on the manufacturing base that so-called "free trade" wreaks.

Well, they saw on Tuesday night. Or they COULD see...if they would look.

Will we? I kind of doubt it. The Republican CORE is a certain financial outlook on the world. It's ideological more than pragmatic. I don't think that Republicans are for the most part willing to admit that when the numbers say the economy is doing great, they're losing a whole swath of the country because, really, the economy ISN'T great in a lot of places, and the reason it's not great is the effect of Republican policies. Anxiety breeds blue votes.

If the trend holds, the Democrat wins the election. Let Indiana and Ohio - manufacturing bastions - go blue, and it's over for the GOP.

The biggest thing we Republicans need to do is to have an honest talk about economic policy, and change course on a few things.

is right on

19 posted on 11/09/2006 12:20:17 PM PST by jpsb
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To: MikeA

"So if Americans were turning out Republicans over corruption, then they did so with an amazing double-standard and not just a bit of hypocrisy. It's unfair really when you consider Republicans largely dispatched with their sleazeoids while Democrats just hid theirs in a backroom until after the elections, expecting and exacting zero accountability from them.

But one has to credit the media with that for ignoring Democratic corruption while hyping even mere allegations or the appearance of wrong with Republicans such as a raid on Curt Weldon's daughters home that in no way suggests guilt. Yet Weldon lost. Jefferson, Mollohan, Menedez, and Reid on the other hand had a good night last night."

Very true, and very frustrating to see the media double-standard succeed.


20 posted on 11/10/2006 6:48:34 PM PST by WOSG (Broken-glass time, Republicans! Save the Congress!)
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