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The (Finally) Emerging Republican Majority
The Weekly Standard ^ | 10/27/03 | Fred Barnes

Posted on 10/17/2003 9:15:05 PM PDT by Pokey78

GOP officials don't like to talk about it, but they have become the dominant party.

A FTER THE 1972 AND 1980 ELECTIONS, Republicans said political realignment across the country would soon make them the dominant party. It didn't happen. Now, despite highly favorable signs in the 2002 midterm elections and the California recall, Republicans fear a jinx. Realignment? they ask. What realignment?

Matthew Dowd, President Bush's polling expert, notes heavy Republican turnout in 2002 and the recall, a splintering of the Democratic coalition, Republican gains among Latinos, and shrinking Democratic voter identification--all unmistakable signs of realignment. But he won't call it realignment. Whoa! says Bill McInturff, one of the smartest Republican strategists, let's not be premature. Before anyone claims realignment has put Republicans in control nationally, McInturff says, the GOP must win the White House, Senate, and House in 2004 and maybe even hold Congress in 2006. Bush adviser Karl Rove agrees. He recently told a Republican group that the realignment question won't be decided until 2004.

There's really no reason to wait. Realignment is already here, and well advanced. In 1964, Barry Goldwater cracked the Democratic lock on the South. In 1968 and 1972, Republicans established a permanent advantage in presidential races. In the big bang of realignment, 1994, Republicans took the House and Senate and wiped out Democratic leads in governorships and state legislatures. Now, realignment has reached its entrenchment phase. Republicans are tightening their grip on Washington and erasing their weakness among women and Latinos. The gender gap now exposes Democratic weakness among men. Sure, an economic collapse or political shock could reverse these gains. But that's not likely.

Look at the recall. With two ballot questions, no party primaries, and a short campaign, it wasn't a normal election. But it displayed all the signs of realignment. Republicans were enthusiastic, Democrats downcast, Latinos in play, and the gender gap was stood on its head. The result: California is no longer a reliably Democratic state. Until the October 7 recall that replaced Democratic governor Gray Davis with Arnold Schwarzenegger, Republicans hadn't won a major statewide race since 1994. Bush spent millions there in 2000 but lost California by 11 points to Al Gore, who spent zilch in the state.

Yet in the recall, Republicans captured 62 percent of the vote. Bush's approval rating was slightly positive (49 to 48 percent), roughly the same as in other states. In the Fox News exit poll, 39 percent of voters identified themselves as Democrats, 37 percent as Republicans--a big GOP gain since last year when the Democratic lead was 7 or 8 points. A solid majority of women voted to recall Davis and elect a Republican. According to the Los Angeles Times exit poll, 41 percent of Latinos voted for a Republican governor--over a Latino Democrat, Cruz Bustamante. California is now competitive.

Democrats insist the recall merely showed anger against incumbents. In fact, it showed California was catching up with a powerful Republican trend over the past decade. In 1992, Democrats captured 51 percent of the total vote in House races to 46 percent for Republicans. By 2002, those numbers had flipped--Republicans 51 percent, Democrats 46 percent. And Republicans have held their House majority over five elections, including two in which Democratic presidential candidates won the popular vote. They won 230 House seats in 1994, 226 in 1996, 223 in 1998, 221 in 2000, and 229 in 2002. They also won Senate control in those elections.

These voting patterns fit Walter Dean Burnham's definition of realignment: "a sudden transformation that turns out to be permanent." Burnham is a University of Texas political scientist, just retired but still the chief theorist of realignment. He is neither a Republican nor a conservative.

The same Republican trend is true for state elections. In 1992, Democrats captured 59 percent of state legislative seats (4,344 to 3,031 for Republicans). Ten years later, Republicans won their first majority (3,684 to 3,626) of state legislators since 1952. In 1992, Democrats controlled the legislatures of 25 states to 8 for Republicans, while the others had split control. Today, Republicans rule 21 legislatures to 16 for Democrats. Governors? Republicans had 18 in 1992, Democrats 30. Today, Republicans hold 27 governorships, Democrats 23.

Not to belabor dry numbers, but Republicans have also surged in party identification. Go back to 1982, the year of the first midterm election of Ronald Reagan's presidency. The Harris Poll found Democrats had a 14-point edge (40 to 26 percent) as the party with which voters identified. By 1992, the Democratic edge was 6 points (36 to 30 percent) and last year, President Bush's midterm election, it was 3 points (34 to 31 percent).

But the Harris Poll tilts slightly Democratic. (In fact, I believe most polls underestimate Republican ID because of nominal Democrats who routinely vote Republican.)The 2000 national exit poll showed Republicans and Democrats tied at 34 percent. A Republican poll after the 2002 elections gave the party a 3- to 4-point edge. Based on his own poll in July, Democrat Mark Penn (who once polled for Bill Clinton) declared: "In terms of the percentage of voters who identify themselves as Democrats, the Democratic party is currently in its weakest position since the dawn of the New Deal." His survey pegged Democratic ID at 32 percent, Republican ID at 30 percent. A half-century ago, 49 percent of voters said they were Democrats. Today, wrote Penn, "among middle class voters, the Democratic party is a shadow of its former self."

All these figures represent "a general creeping mode of realignment, election by election," says Burnham. By gaining governors and state legislators, Republicans are now in the entrenchment phase. "If you control the relevant institutions, you can really do a number on the opposition," Burnham says. "You can marginalize them."

Last year, Republicans shattered the mold of midterm elections for a new president, picking up nine House seats. Most of these came from Florida, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, states where Republicans controlled the legislature and governor's office in 2001 and exploited the new census to draw House districts for Republican advantage. In 2002, Republicans completed their takeover of Texas by winning the state house of representatives. This allowed them to gerrymander the U.S. House districts earlier this month to target incumbent white Democrats. Unless the redistricting is overturned in court, Democrats may lose five to seven seats in 2004. "Texas means there's no battle for the House" until after the 2010 census, says Republican pollster Frank Luntz. Democrats may wind up with fewer than 200 seats for the first time since 1946, says Burnham.

Democrats have theorized that the voting patterns of Hispanics, women, and urban professionals were producing what analysts John Judis and Ruy Teixeira called an "emerging Democratic majority." But in 2002 and the recall, the theory faltered. The midterm elections saw the demise of the old gender gap--women voting more Democratic than men--that had endured for over two decades. The intervening event was the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. That "really did change things permanently," says Burnham. In 2002, women, partly out of concern for the security and safety of their families, voted like men. Florida exemplified the change. In 2000, President Bush lost the vote of female professionals in the burgeoning I-4 corridor across central Florida. In 2002, his brother, Republican governor Jeb Bush, won that vote.

The California recall offered another test of whether the gender gap had been reversed, especially since Schwarzenegger was accused of sexual harassment. In the Fox poll, 53 percent of women voted to recall Davis, 56 percent for a Republican for governor (43 percent for Schwarzenegger). White women were even more Republican--58 percent for recall, 63 percent for a Republican (49 percent for Schwarzenegger).

What about men? In the recall, they voted more Republican than women by 8 points, which highlights the gender gap problem for Democrats. The shift of men to the Republican party was the engine of realignment in the South and plains and Rocky Mountain states. Penn agrees: "The main decline has been due to a massive defection among white voters, particularly men," he wrote in analyzing his own July poll. "Today only 22 percent of white men identify as Democratic voters and only 32 percent of white women do the same. Blacks continue to remain stalwarts of the party, while Hispanics are now split between Democrats and Independents." The Latino vote is all the more important because it is growing as a percentage of the national electorate. The black vote isn't.

The good news for Republicans is that Latino independents are increasingly inclined to vote Republican. It may not have been a big deal in 1998, when George Bush won half the Latino vote in his reelection as Texas governor. It was, however, a big deal when Jeb Bush captured a majority of the non-Cuban Latino vote in Florida last year. George Bush, running for president, had lost this vote decisively in Florida in 2000.

In the recall, Republican inroads among Latinos were extraordinary. "One cardinal principle of Democratic party politics in California . . . has been that Latinos, like African-Americans, will remain loyal Democrats regardless of what the party does," Joel Kotkin, a senior fellow at Pepperdine University and respected California political analyst, wrote for the New Republic website. That principle crumbled in the recall. Democrats attacked Schwarzenegger for backing Proposition 187, which barred illegal immigrants from getting public services but was later overturned, and for opposing driver's licenses for illegals. Nonetheless, he got 31 percent of the Latino vote, the best showing for a Republican candidate in California in a decade. Blacks voted 18 percent for Schwarzenegger.

Democrats have two further problems, one with image, the other with culture. With Schwarzenegger and former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani as the second and third most visible Republicans in the country, it's difficult for Democrats to pigeonhole Republicans as conservative extremists. Schwarzenegger "bridges the cultural gap" between moderate and conservative Republicans, says Republican representative Tom Davis of Virginia, an elections expert. Luntz, the Republican pollster, says the emergence of Schwarzenegger means "you can be cool and be a Republican." By the way, when Schwarzenegger appeared with Bush in California last week, he got a bigger ovation than the president.

Davis says the divide on cultural issues--abortion, gays, guns, etc.--is a diminishing problem for Republicans. Schwarzenegger's prominence makes it okay for voters who are moderate-to-liberal on cultural issues but conservative on taxes and spending to be Republican. These voters require "permission to stay Republican," Davis argues. And Schwarzenegger "gives them a comfort level. But Democrats don't have anyone to make cultural conservatives feel comfortable. It's the Democrats' worst nightmare."

Nothing is guaranteed in politics. The political future is never a straight-line projection of the present. And the ascendant party always hits bumps in the road. Democrats were dominant from 1932 to 1994, but they lost major elections in 1938, 1946, and 1952. Now, Republicans are stronger than at any time in at least a half-century and probably since the 1920s. Realignment has already happened, and there's no reason to pretend otherwise.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: fredbarnes; gop; realignment; recallanalysis; republicanmajority; republicans
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To: Pubbie
Given the demographics of the Slavic regions (the ferility rate is about 1.5), that number leaving the home Slav counties, might empty the place of a certain mammalian species, namely homo sapiens.
21 posted on 10/17/2003 10:00:19 PM PDT by Torie
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To: untenured
"What would they do? How, a decade later, would the country be different?"

Republicans tend to get kinda complacent without competition. I'm not sure it's good that we have TOO much of a majority :)

Lets see how the AWB ban goes, that'll be a big sign of if they'll do what they need to when in control.
22 posted on 10/17/2003 10:01:29 PM PDT by Monty22
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To: Torie
Again you are assuming the Russian birthrate stays EXACTLY the same for over 40 years, that is avery BIG assumprtion.

Anyway, Ukraine, Belarus, and Moldova have a combined population of 206 million people, so 20 million people immigrating wouldn't be that catastrophic.
23 posted on 10/17/2003 10:03:28 PM PDT by Pubbie (Vote "No" On Recall, "Yes" On Bustamante)
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To: Fledermaus
It's more like 19%-20% of GDP.

You're right. The 2001 Statistical Abstract has federal spending at 1864 billion, total GDP at 10,082 billion.

I had remembered often seeing the Wall Street Journal editorial page claim that income taxes to GDP were typically 17-20% of GDP, and thought that Social Security taxes and borrowing would have pushed it over 25%, but evidently not.

Whether I did actually see the WSJ say that before my memory lost some of its youthful vigor is another matter, of course.

I wonder what the figure would be after five (or 20) years of GOP dominance of the fedgov.

24 posted on 10/17/2003 10:07:44 PM PDT by untenured
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To: Pubbie
By the way, if you read Michael Barone about the Hispanic vote, and how its evolution has so eerily tracked the Italian vote of an earlier time, (low voter turnout and relative disinterest in politics and both disinterest and suspicion in relying on the goverment as a safety net (can't trust the bastards, and by all means, avoid paying any taxes to the extent one can without going to jail), great physical industry and hard work, somewhat below average emphasis on education, tight families and neighborhoods, a patriarchal orientation (today the word would be "sexist")), you would be amazed. You simply want instant gratification. Be patient.
25 posted on 10/17/2003 10:08:09 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Pokey78
The Republican realignment is happening, no doubt about that. But it is still a work in progress. The realignment of the American public has not been a watershed, like after The Great Deperssion. It has been a slow and gradual change in voter sentiment, and continues to be so. And it's as much do to the decline of the 'Rats. The 'Rat party was once a blue-collar party, favorably disposed towards income redistribution, but still recognizably American. It has sense become the party of self-serving bureaucrats, military-hating demagogues, militant secularists, environmental extremeists, law-enforcement obstructers, ivory-tower Ivy-Leaguers, radical feminists, smug, know-it-all journalists, and Hollywood airheads. The cover of the media elite had covered this up for many years, but now it's out there for all to see and hear (talk radio and the internet played a role in this). In some ways, the Republican realignment illistrates the tragic downfall of the Democrat party, which has a flawed but honorable history in this country. Perhaps, like the Whigs, they will crumble under the weight of their current illogic and a new party will rise in its place.
26 posted on 10/17/2003 10:08:19 PM PDT by Clintonfatigued (It's happening, but slowly)
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To: Pubbie
You do know Moldova speaks a Romance language don't you? I wouldn't trust them as a result. Slavs speaking a non Slav language. That is highly suspect. Why do you mention them by the way and not Romanians proper?
27 posted on 10/17/2003 10:10:50 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Pokey78
Davis says the divide on cultural issues--abortion, gays, guns, etc.--is a diminishing problem for Republicans. Schwarzenegger's prominence makes it okay for voters who are moderate-to-liberal on cultural issues but conservative on taxes and spending to be Republican. These voters require "permission to stay Republican," Davis argues. And Schwarzenegger "gives them a comfort level. But Democrats don't have anyone to make cultural conservatives feel comfortable. It's the Democrats' worst nightmare."

This is great. Republicans can win on fiscal *or* cultural issues, while Democrats are stuck in the ghettos of welfarism and/or cultural depravity in the big cities. We should not complain too much about a big-tent Republican party, it means the right-of-center conservative-moderate coalition RUNS the country, instead of Liberals ... IT BEATS "MAJORITYLEADER DASCHLE" and "PRESIDENT HILLARY!"

28 posted on 10/17/2003 10:11:40 PM PDT by WOSG (QUESTION STUPIDITY!)
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To: Pubbie
By the way, Ukraine and Belarus and Moldova have less than a 100 million people combined, far less. I doubt if it is as much as 50 million. Look it up.
29 posted on 10/17/2003 10:12:40 PM PDT by Torie
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To: untenured
Here is mine:

- Judges who will reverse Roe v Wade
- A Federal Government no bigger than 15% of GNP (it is 20% now).
- Social Security and Medicare reformed so people have more choice and control over it and the tax burden on it is less
- More Federalism, less Federal control.

What else would you order?
What else whould you want? Ask and you shall receive!
30 posted on 10/17/2003 10:14:01 PM PDT by WOSG (QUESTION STUPIDITY!)
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To: pawdoggie
Morris has become Cicero of our time in demanding the immediate sacking of Teheran.

That would be Cato, I think...
31 posted on 10/17/2003 10:14:33 PM PDT by Antoninus (In hoc signo, vinces †)
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To: supercat
"If the Republicans had the brains to point out that Clinton's "accomplishments" were the product of a Republican Congress, they would have made huge gains in 1996. Unfortunately, they decided instead to blast themselves in the feet by supporting that loser Dole."

INDEED! Proof that a bad campaigner can ruin a whole re-alignment. America was ready to realign in 1948, but Dewey ran an awful campaign, and Truman triumphed. The Republican Congress of 1946 was the most convervative Congress between 1928 and 1994, but its heyday was shortlived. ... Fortunately, Bush saved us somewhat in 2000 and 2002, so that 1994 was not just a blip .... AND YET, we have a Republican majority but not a conservative majority.
32 posted on 10/17/2003 10:17:43 PM PDT by WOSG (QUESTION STUPIDITY!)
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To: Pubbie
Why is it that the United States is limiting immigrants from Russia and eastern Europe, while allowing potentially dangerous people from north Africa and the Middle East to arrive in such large numbers?
33 posted on 10/17/2003 10:21:39 PM PDT by Clintonfatigued
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To: Torie
"you would be amazed. You simply want instant gratification. Be patient."

I disagree with Barone on this point that the Hispanic vote tracks with the Italian immigrants (But I like him anyway).

It is somewhat of a myth that Hispanics are socially conservative.

For one thing, 43% of Hispanic children born last year were born out of wedlock, compared to 68% of Black births, 22% for Whites, and 17% for Asians - something that did definetely NOT happen with Italian immigrants.

Although Hispanics disapprove of Homosexuality, so do Black Americans, yet that hasn't helped the GOP get any significant amount of the Black vote.

Furthermore, most Latin American cultures are heavily influenced by Western Europe, and since Western Europe is now Rock-Solid- Militantly Atheist, Atheism is now taking hold in Latin America, and church attendance there is already at near-Western European lows.

Abortion, along with divorce, has skyrocketed in the past decade throughout Latin America, despite obviously strong disapproval by the Vatican.

And finally, Like Western Europeans, Latin Americans are very sexually promiscous, again another feature not found in Italian Immigrants.

I could go on, but I'm tired and need to go to sleep, maybe we will continue this discussion tomorrow.

Best Regards,

Pubbie
34 posted on 10/17/2003 10:21:57 PM PDT by Pubbie (Vote "No" On Recall, "Yes" On Bustamante)
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To: Torie
"Ukraine and Belarus and Moldova"

Over 62 million - plus you're forgetting Russia with 144.5 Million. so that puts the total over 206 million.
35 posted on 10/17/2003 10:24:50 PM PDT by Pubbie (Vote "No" On Recall, "Yes" On Bustamante)
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To: Pubbie
Good post, but Italian men back when knew sex outside of marriage as a generalization. Granted, in that earlier age, out of wedlock children were rarer. When women were knocked up, one got married, and then, well, whatever. All the best.
36 posted on 10/17/2003 10:25:16 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Pubbie
I will take your word for it. You didn't mention Russia. I take it, your exclusion was an accident. In any event, 20 million of them are not coming to the US in any rather narrow window of time.
37 posted on 10/17/2003 10:27:19 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
"You do know Moldova speaks a Romance language don't you?"

Sure, but ethnically they are a combination of Slavs and Romanians due to intermarriage - and most Romanians don't consider Moldovans to be "True" Romanians.

In fact, Moldovans want their country to merge with Russia, which they consider they're ethnic brothers in the same way that Eastern Ukrainians want to relink with Russia.
38 posted on 10/17/2003 10:27:28 PM PDT by Pubbie (Vote "No" On Recall, "Yes" On Bustamante)
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To: Pubbie
By the way, you do know that Slavs living in Slav nations have the highest abortion rate on this planet don't you?
39 posted on 10/17/2003 10:28:33 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
The idea that there will be a stable majority party holding sway is profoundly silly. It is unlikely to happen, particularly since with modern communications and focus groups and pollings, the parties, and more to the point, political entreprenuers, can tack with considerably more accuracy and with boatloads of more money for the media, towards trying to garner the vital swing voters.

Disagree. Your analysis overlooks the fact that the political parties, and their candidates, must service their core constituencies, and must meet their approval in primary elections to become candidates in the first place.

Because of the relentless pressure exerted by a dominantly leftist intelligencia and media over several decades, the Republican Party has been forced to marginalize or exclude extremists, whereas extremists have been allowed to thrive in the Democratic because of cover provided by these same socially influential elements.

Since the margin between the two parties is decided by their appeal to moderates and independents, and since moderates and independents are hostile to political extremists (of either ideological wing) this puts Republicans at an advantage over Democrats. The GOP has become the majority party, and there is every prospect that it will remain so until the extreme left is expelled from their position of substantial control and influence within the Democratic Party.

40 posted on 10/17/2003 10:28:37 PM PDT by Stultis
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