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How Democrats defeated themselves
Zeit Online ^ | November 25, 2016 | Pete Brodnitz

Posted on 11/25/2016 10:37:41 AM PST by Kaslin

The white working class in America is worried about change and afraid of economic decline. The Democrats further stoked those fears.

What fueled Trump's improbable victory was a profound sense among working class White voters that the United States is losing control of its borders, its basic identity and its ability to generate good jobs that deliver decent wages to ordinary Americans. Trump engaged with voters on the topic of how global economic forces are changing America. Trump's recognition that this is a major concern for many Americans gave him a powerful message that allowed him to win states that have traditionally voted Democratic for President, and it allowed him to overcome significant concerns Americans have about his judgement, qualifications and even character.

Trump's victory should be a major wake-up call for the Democratic Party because it demonstrated deep-seated hunger among American voters for leaders who will address voter concerns about their future – and their ability to get good jobs in the future. While there are clearly uglier aspects to Trump's appeal, I believe this core appeal will continue to win support for Trump (and by extension other Republicans) if Democrats fail to engage in this conversation with voters.

Trump did not win the most votes; Hillary Clinton won at least 1,5 million more votes than Trump. And Trump did not win over the public on many of his signature issue positions per the election day exit polls. But Trump won the most votes in three traditionally Democratic states, while Clinton won the most votes in three states that are traditionally "swing states" (she won Colorado, Virginia and New Mexico – states that are not traditionally reliable for Democrats). Why did these states shift? The answer lies in their demographics. Among the electoral "battleground" states, Trump won three states that are low on diversity and high on non-college White voters while Clinton won states that are high on both diversity and on college-educated White voters. In short, the American electorate divided significantly by both racial lines and by education level.

There were other changes in the electorate if you compare 2016 with the Obama-Romney contest of 2012 but they are less significant. For instance, the percentage of the electorate that identify as "liberal" did not change – it was 21% of the electorate in both 2012 and 2016 and Clinton won the same share of the liberal vote as had Obama.

That raises the question – why would the electorate divide along educational level lines? What would make a White voter in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania or Michigan who supported Obama (twice) vote for Trump?

One theory about what happened in the elections is that in the three states Trump added to his column, voters supported him because of their "anger" about economic policy such as tax breaks for wealthy people and corporations. If this is true, the path forward for Democrats would be clear: recognize the anger, address the causes of the anger such as a "rigged" or "stacked" political system and a tax system that favors the wealthy. The problem is that if we listen to voters, it's clear that this is not what they voted for in this election.

Twice last year I polled voters to ask their state of mind. I did this in a general election poll of voters in battleground states (conducted for Progressive Policy Institute, or PPI) and in a national poll of non-college White voters (done jointly with Jill Normington for House majority PAC). In both cases, voters overwhelmingly said they described their frame of mind as worried, not angry or optimistic: in the late June survey of White non-college voters, 65% said they are worried about the future of the U.S. economy while 13% said they are angry and 23% said they are optimistic. This data is consistent with what I have been hearing voters say for the past ten years – that they are worried about how changes taking place in the world are leaving them behind. These concerns are most acute among non-college voters.

Most important topics of electors who voted for Trump

Additionally, the three states that were key to the Trump victory (Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michigan) are currently all governed by pro-business Governors. It seems unlikely that voters in these states elected this type of Governor but are now clamoring for anti-business populism. More likely, they are looking for leaders who will help create good jobs.

Some context on this topic is important. When we asked non-college White voters if they aspire to have a factory job that pays well or an office job with a salary, by a 72% to 28% margin, these voters said they aspire to a factory job. This means that they feel the economy is shedding exactly the type of job that they want. In our PPI poll, we found that by 49% to 40%, voters in battleground states preferred a focusing on increasing the skill level of workers to prepare them for jobs in high-tech manufacturing, as opposed to focusing on bringing back manufacturing jobs that do not require advanced education or training. That means Democrats should engage in a conversation with voters about how to prepare people for the manufacturing jobs of tomorrow. Democrats also need to recognize that for many people offering free college education largely misses the point – they want jobs that do not require college and they do not want to go to college. In other words, many of the voters in question are non-college educated by choice, not because the educational system is rigged or out of reach.

Voters' concern about the changes that are taking place in America also has a cultural component. When we asked non-college White voters what concerns them, 64% expressed concern about the increasing presence of mosques in America, 57% are concerned that same- sex couples can get married, 59% said they are concerned that White people will no longer be a majority. However, the concern that was shared by almost these voters was economic – 80% were concerned that the rich are getting richer all the time.

Distribution of white voters by college degree

So how does this all relate to this year's election? In the exit polls, voters identified the economy as their top issue concern and the same exit polls said that Trump was viewed as better equipped to handle this issue.

One lesson that Democrats – and all incumbents – need to learn from this experience is that if we do not tell the voters how we are making economic progress, we should not be surprised when voters fail to recognize our economic progress or the work the government is doing to improve the economy. That is one reason why the economy remains the top concern among voters despite the progress of recent years.

This is a problem of Democrats' own making. During the entire Obama Presidency, many Democrats have advised Democratic officials to stress the problems in the economy instead of talking about the progress we made. The rationale for this advice is that voters might think we are "out of touch" if we say we are making progress and that is certainly a danger since many people are struggling in today's economy. But because Democrats rarely made a case for how they are providing the change people want, voters give Democrats little credit for the changes that are occurring and underestimate the progress we are making. The Republicans will not make this mistake. In fact, in 2014 when the Republicans won the majority of seats in the Senate their leader, Mitch McConnell claimed that the economy was improving just at the prospect of the Republicans assuming the majority.

A second lesson we need to learn is that elections are usually about change – even when the incumbent is popular. Even though on election day, 53% of voters approved of the job President Obama is doing, more voters said they were looking for a candidate who "can bring change" (39% said this) rather than a candidate who offers the right experience (21%), good judgement (20%) or who "cares about me" (15%). Clinton won among voters who wanted experience, judgement or a caring candidate but voters who sought change opted for Trump over Clinton by a 83% to 15% margin. At the same time, Clinton got 85% of the vote among those who approved of the job Obama was doing but Trump got 90% among those who disapproved – so Clinton got more of the down-side than upside of the President's popularity.

This is a problem of Democrats' own making. During the entire Obama Presidency, many Democrats have advised Democratic officials to stress the problems in the economy instead of talking about the progress we made. The rationale for this advice is that voters might think we are "out of touch" if we say we are making progress and that is certainly a danger since many people are struggling in today's economy. But because Democrats rarely made a case for how they are providing the change people want, voters give Democrats little credit for the changes that are occurring and underestimate the progress we are making. The Republicans will not make this mistake. In fact, in 2014 when the Republicans won the majority of seats in the Senate their leader, Mitch McConnell claimed that the economy was improving just at the prospect of the Republicans assuming the majority.

A second lesson we need to learn is that elections are usually about change – even when the incumbent is popular. Even though on election day, 53% of voters approved of the job President Obama is doing, more voters said they were looking for a candidate who "can bring change" (39% said this) rather than a candidate who offers the right experience (21%), good judgement (20%) or who "cares about me" (15%). Clinton won among voters who wanted experience, judgement or a caring candidate but voters who sought change opted for Trump over Clinton by a 83% to 15% margin. At the same time, Clinton got 85% of the vote among those who approved of the job Obama was doing but Trump got 90% among those who disapproved – so Clinton got more of the down-side than upside of the President's popularity.

Most important candidate quality

Ronald Reagan got this right when heading into his re-election he defined himself as the candidate of change. Former President Clinton understood this. At the Democratic Convention, he delivered a significant speech about how Hillary Clinton is a life-long "change-maker" but the theme was otherwise not part of the general election focus.

And in the end, the Clinton campaign was successful at making the case against Trump: on election day, 60% said he was not qualified to be President and 63% said he did not have the right temperament. However, Trump won the votes of about 20% of voters who said he did not have the judgement or temperament needed to serve as President.

Third, we need to recognize that Trump engaged voters on the topic that they wanted to have addressed. His campaign was detoured by countless side controversies but it featured some signature issues: the wall with Mexico, attacking trade, banning either Muslims or people from majority-Muslim countries from entering the United States. The common element between these issues: they relate to America's place in the world and concern that we have lost control over how these changes are affecting our jobs, our national security and to some extent our culture. And Trump's message provided many people with a sense of control. He emphasized strength in both his rhetoric and the way his campaign was staged – big rallies where he would single out people and show his control over others. He said he would save people's jobs and their lives. He said he would stop bad things from happening. That's a compelling message that clearly resonated with many people in the three targeted states that voted for Bill Clinton, Al Gore, John Kerry, and Barack Obama but then voted for Donald Trump.

Despite this, most voters do not support Trump's agenda. In the election day exit polls, most said they oppose a wall on the border with Mexico, and while many expressed concern about trade, all the other research I have seen indicates that few Americans believe we can be successful without trade agreements. In fact, Trump changed his positon on trade during the campaign from an initial blanket opposition of trade agreements to a more nuanced opposition to TPP and NAFTA. That change never got highlighted during the campaign.

This election was also not a vote for angry attacks on companies. Many Americans are clearly about American companies that that no longer have loyalty to their employees or strong ties to America. And many Americans want to see stronger accountability in corporate governance and fairness in the tax code. But the bottom line is this – if American's main pre-occupation is in re-establishing job security that means starting by talking with voters foremost about how we can make sure that companies are successful and providing good jobs. Instead, Democrats usually start by talking about corporate accountability, or raising the minimum wage, or increasing taxes on high earners – issues that have plenty of support but that do not tell voters how we plan to create good jobs.

If you go back to the finding that non-college White voters want to work in a factory – they are saying they want to work for a large company. In fact, when in an April battleground state poll, I conducted for PPI we asked if voters agree with several statements, 90% agreed that "it is important to create an environment that allows American companies to be competitive with foreign business." In the same poll, 75% agreed that "to have a strong economy, the U.S. must rely heavily on trade with other countries, which makes trade agreements with other countries important."

Moving forward, if Democrats listen to voters we will hear that many of them are concerned about our place in the world. Donald Trump engaged voters on this topic, heightened their anxiety and told them he will essentially make the changes taking place in the world stop at our borders. It's time for Democrats to fully join this conversation and alleviate people's anxiety instead of just amplifying it. If we do so we will win the hearts and minds of voters who know that America's greatness involves creating good jobs, engaging with the rest of world and competing based on our great workforce, embracing the diversity of our country and creating opportunity that lifts more people up economically.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2016issues; election; hillary2016

1 posted on 11/25/2016 10:37:41 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Interesting article.

But will the liberals take any of this to heart? Or will they persist in thinking that we are all racist, sexist, homophobic, Islamophobic, etc. per Hillary’s screed on the subject?

Because if they persist in labeling all of us to be bigots of some sort, there’s no way Democrats will address any of this.

The liberals have knee jerk reactions. You can’t discuss immigration, for example, because they will label you as xenophobic, tell you we’re a nation of immigrants, and all that crap, which then ends the discussion.

You can’t discuss issues of immigrants or refugees from Muslim countries, because then they will say you are Islamophobic, and then that’s the end of that discussion.

The same is true on many issues. Libeals label you as a bigot, and then you can’t discuss issues any further. Liberals set themselves up as some moral authorities on issues of bigotry, and being a bigot per their theology is the worst sin in the world. Thus they label you as unworthy of them deigning to even speak to you.


2 posted on 11/25/2016 10:45:55 AM PST by Dilbert San Diego
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To: Kaslin
What fueled Trump's improbable victory was a profound sense among working class White voters

No, what was improbable was that White Voters would continue to vote against their own best interest and for increasing support (welfare, charity, whatever you want to call it); and what was improbable was that people who primarily work for a living can continue in a coalition with people who vote for a living.(That last part is not color dependent).

Now, for future election cycles, which is more improbable? That Republicans will learn lessons from this election cycle and continue to build the natural coalition, or that the Democrats can find a way to have productive members of society vote for "Rocky Horror Show" candidates?

3 posted on 11/25/2016 10:48:09 AM PST by Bernard (The Road To Hell Is Not Paved With Good Results)
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To: Kaslin

How Democrats intend to keep defeating themselves:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3498373/posts


4 posted on 11/25/2016 10:57:55 AM PST by Bubba_Leroy (Ding Dong the Witch is Dead!)
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To: Bubba_Leroy
Ex-Sanders aide: 'We don't need white people leading the Democratic Party right now'

Giving thess sort of idiots a stage works wonders, eh?

5 posted on 11/25/2016 11:10:44 AM PST by blam (Jeff Sessions For President)
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To: Kaslin

They lose because they don’t cheat ruthlessly enough. At least, that’s what they’re telling themselves.


6 posted on 11/25/2016 11:12:12 AM PST by rightwingcrazy ("We will not tolerate those who are intolerant of the intolerant.")
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To: Dilbert San Diego

Some might, most? I doubt it. They are much to ignorant


7 posted on 11/25/2016 11:19:22 AM PST by Kaslin (Most humans have an attention span of about 10 minutes, after that they will revert to daydreaming)
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To: Kaslin

King Obama’s dopey Hopey-Changey left America hungry for real change.

Bill Clinton was smart enough to understand this as evidenced by his ridiculous attempt to peddle Hillary as a “Change Agent” at the democrat party convention.

No one bought it, especially those outside the ranks of the hard core democrat party faithful, but at least Bill read the tea leaves correctly and tried to move the campaign in that direction.

But from that moment on Hillary campaigned as the third term of Obama instead of an agent for change.

I’m glad no one bought what Bill was selling.


8 posted on 11/25/2016 12:05:38 PM PST by Iron Munro (If Illegals voted Rebublican 50 Million Democrats Would Be Screaming "Build The Wall!")
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To: Kaslin

They made their contempt for working people evident.


9 posted on 11/25/2016 1:21:32 PM PST by TBP (0bama lies, Granny dies.)
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To: Kaslin

It seems to me that everybody on both sides is misidentifying what is taken to be one of the primary demographics. I refer to the educated and the non college split. Most of the “educated” are not educated. They are at the most favorable. trained, less favorably we would say they are indoctrinated but other than the hard sciences and the white collar trades i.e accounting and business et al, they are NOT educated. Institutions of “higher” education are not in the business of education at all. They are in the business of training up the zombies needed in an oligarchic socialism. They are taught not to think and not to entertain any ideas other than what they are fed. They are denied access to history and geography and to Literature. They do not know what systems have worked and have not worked in the past. They are unaware of the consequences of anti rational systems. All they have heard or read is that one or two such systems have collapsed in the past but that the failure was due to the opposition of heartless enemies or that the leaders did not take their systems far enough..


10 posted on 11/25/2016 2:01:26 PM PST by arthurus (One should not bank on the Democrats' inability to "find" any number of "uncounted" votes)
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To: Kaslin

Didn’t we just read the other day that the ONLY demographic that voted less for Trump than Romney was WHITES? Yes, blacks, Hispanics, and all others INCREASED for Trump. Yet we continue to get this “Trump voters are racist” crap. Talk about fake news. Truth is Hillary got less votes from all demographics in places where it mattered.


11 posted on 11/25/2016 2:03:49 PM PST by wastoute (Government cannot redistribute wealth. Government can only redistribute poverty.)
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To: Kaslin
The Democratic leadership is committed to the end of whites, whiteness, and white's earned privileges. They've said it over and over, their spokespeople celebrate it (as if it had already happened), and the black and brown members of their coalition demand it.

There's no going back for them.

12 posted on 11/25/2016 6:25:01 PM PST by Jim Noble (Die Gedanken sind Frei)
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To: Kaslin

The hate whitey program sunk them. Whites struggling for work do not need to hear the dems call for their unemployment and racial inferiority. They saw the inspired hate crimes and many were mistreated personally by “progressives”. Progressives are regressive in terms of wealth, race and sex.


13 posted on 11/25/2016 6:54:16 PM PST by SaraJohnson
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To: Kaslin

” If this is true, the path forward for Democrats would be clear: recognize the anger, address the causes of the anger such as a “rigged” or “stacked” political system and a tax system that favors the wealthy. “

Democrats can’t do this. Their worldview and power depends on a system set up exactly this way.


14 posted on 11/26/2016 9:16:03 PM PST by ModelBreaker
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To: Kaslin

The dem leadership doesn’t even know stuff like who the hell should use what bathroom. Trump incredibly might not know either, but at least he doesn’t seem to want to punish folks if they disagree with him about it.

Things like that turned off a lot of male blue collar white dems. I bet lots voted republican for the first time over this garbage, at least I have talked to many such in PA and NJ.

FReegards


15 posted on 11/26/2016 9:27:43 PM PST by Ransomed
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To: Dilbert San Diego

They are the masters of something though! They have made a high art, or maybe I should say a low art, of blending arrogance and stupidity. In their minds the two together elevate them to a pinnacle from which they glare down on us mere “deplorables”. They project their own glaring faults on their opponents and imagine themselves to be in possession of all that is good and noble. Only in the novels of Charles Dickens were such characters to be found until their appearance by the millions in recent decades. Seth Pecksniff and Uriah Heep in countless numbers and fifty different “genders”.


16 posted on 11/27/2016 7:01:25 AM PST by RipSawyer
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