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NRO - PONNURU, SALAM: Away from the Gated Community (GOP Must move to the "Center" on Economics)
National RINO Review ^ | March 09, 2009 | RAMESH PONNURU & REIHAN SALAM

Posted on 03/10/2009 1:38:04 PM PDT by GOPGuide

Demography is destiny in politics, or so we have heard. In 2004, the growth of the exurbs was said to be generating a permanent Republican majority. Now the strong support for the Democrats by young people, Hispanics, and non-Christians is said to be creating an unstoppable trend toward liberalism.

The demographic trends are real. National Journal columnist Ronald Brownstein recently illustrated how much they matter with a neat exercise. He divided the electorate into six broad demographic groups — e.g., college-educated white voters and Hispanics — and noted how each had voted in the McCain–Obama contest. “If each of these groups voted as it did in 2008 but constituted the same share of the electorate as in 1992, McCain would have won. Comfortably.”

Yet demography isn’t everything. The shift from unified Republican control of the government in 2005 to unified Democratic control in 2009 was not produced only or even mainly by demographic trends. The make-up of the country did not change that quickly. A lot of people who had voted for Republicans started voting for Democrats.

Those people are not easily categorizable. Republicans lost ground among Hispanics, whites, and blacks; among women and men; among voters with college degrees and voters without; among evangelicals and non-Christians; among libertarians and populists.

It is possible that Republicans will regain popularity, just as they have lost it, across the board — if, for example, continued economic trouble becomes associated with the Democrats. Certainly there is no point in trying to add tiny demographic groups to the Republican coalition: The party is too far down to get a majority that way.

Indeed, Republicans are so far out of power right now that they will probably have to do what they should always have been doing: figure out the main challenges to the national interest and how to meet them. But even the most well-considered agenda will fail to accomplish anything if it is impossible to imagine how a majority of the electorate could ever be moved to support it. And the truth is that Republicans are going to have to choose which voters they are most eager to court. Time and money are limited, after all, and the actions that tend to please one type of voter will displease another.

The distinguished political journalist Michael Barone recently wrote that one of the key choices facing Republicans is “whether to go after downscale or upscale voters.” The former tend to be “cultural conservatives, and rural and small-town voters,” and to love Alaska governor Sarah Palin. The latter tend to be socially liberal and, though Barone does not underscore the point, to disdain Palin. Barone’s tentative conclusion is that “going upscale is the right move.” He points out that young, high-income voters were more likely to support Obama than to support House Democrats, suggesting that Republicans can win them over.

We think that Barone’s tentative judgment is incorrect: To the extent that Republicans have to choose among which group to find new voters, they should look first to “downscale” voters without college degrees. Instead of fretting about Greenwich, Conn., the party needs to focus on the increasingly racially diverse working-class neighborhoods of New Jersey, Minnesota, and Colorado.

Though the college-educated represent a large and growing share of the electorate — 45 percent in 2008, over a third of whom have post-graduate degrees — the country still has a non-college-educated majority. Whereas John McCain won non-college-educated whites (39 percent of the electorate and shrinking) by 58 percent to 40 percent, he lost non-college-educated non-whites (16 percent of the electorate and growing) by an overwhelming 83 percent to 16 percent. Given the historic nature of Barack Obama’s candidacy and the uneven impact of the economic downturn, this shouldn’t be too surprising. Latinos, for example, are concentrated in hard-hit sectors and regions, and a disproportionately large number of non-white homeowners were impacted by the subprime-mortgage crisis. There is good reason to believe that Republican support among non-white voters has bottomed out. More to the point, it is crucially important that it has bottomed out.

McCain won college-educated whites (35 percent of the electorate and growing) by only 51 percent to 47 percent, and improving that number is certainly important for future Republican candidates. But it might actually prove more difficult and more risky than more aggressive outreach to “downscale” non-white cultural conservatives.

To understand why the young, upscale voters Barone mentioned may be hard for Republicans to reach, consider why Democrats have done so well with them in the first place. Many of them are clustered in dense, populous, high-cost communities, whether big cities or their inner suburbs. Government plays a more pervasive role here than it does elsewhere, and voters are socialized into believing that this is a good thing. (It helps that the state and local tax deduction insulates voters in these regions from the costs of governmental profligacy.) Elected officials, regardless of partisan affiliation, are expected to take an active role in managing the conflicts and trade-offs that inevitably emerge over traffic congestion, school funding, policing, and economic development.

One commonly held view is that “upscale” voters are voting against their economic interests out of distaste for Republican social views. This view ignores economic geography. The Center for an Urban Future, a centrist think tank, recently found that a middle-class lifestyle that costs $50,000 in Houston costs $72,772 in Boston and $123,322 in Manhattan. Many of the young, high-income voters who have flocked to the Democrats have done so because they feel financially strapped, and are eager to offload the burdens of acquiring health insurance and affordable housing onto the federal government.

The polling evidence suggests that these voters are as liberal on economic issues as they are on social issues. Among young voters overall, the Pew Research Center found that 69 percent favor an expanded role for government. And the more affluent voters are, the more likely they are to be ideologically consistent, i.e., liberal or conservative on social and economic issues. Shifting left on social issues would endanger the party’s alliance with culturally conservative voters, a key part of Republican success over the last three decades, without sufficing to win over the upscale young.

An alternative strategy would largely maintain the Republican party’s social conservatism while moving to the center on economic issues. That shift on economic issues need not take the form of supporting higher taxes. It would, rather, mean placing less emphasis on tax cuts for high earners and more on tax cuts for people in the middle of the income spectrum. It would mean working harder to get the public to associate Republicans with free-market policies to make health care more affordable and secure for the middle class.

The base of the Republican party is not averse to this type of shift. Midway through the 2008 election, pollsters Glen Bolger (a Republican) and Stanley Greenberg (a Democrat) conducted a survey for National Public Radio that included a “blind taste test” of party policies on a range of issues. The parties’ positions and themes were presented both with and without party labels, and voters were asked to judge the position on the merits. And time and again, like Coke employees favoring Pepsi in a blind sample, Republican respondents preferred the Democratic position on domestic questions. On taxes, for example, the Democratic position called for rolling back the Bush tax cuts and focusing solely on middle-class tax relief. The Republican position called for renewing the Bush tax agenda, coupled with cuts in wasteful spending. When the Republican position was labeled as such, it was supported by 66 percent of Republicans. But when it was not labeled as the GOP position, it was supported by only 38 percent of Republicans — and a narrow majority of Republican voters actually preferred the Democratic line.

A shift to the center on economics would do more than bring the Republican party in line with the views and priorities of its base. It would also allow the party to fight more effectively for downscale voters who are culturally conservative but consider the GOP unresponsive to their economic concerns. Many of these voters are, of course, non-white. As the demographic composition of the country changes, the electoral value of Republican dominance among married white Christians is eroding. But adding married black and Latino and Asian cultural conservatives could revive the party. (There is, incidentally, absolutely no reason to think that young single people will keep voting Democratic in the same percentages as they become older married people.)

The downscale strategy would involve applying old conservative principles in creative new ways, while the upscale strategy would involve jettisoning a fair number of those principles altogether. The downscale strategy might even help Republicans both directly and indirectly with upscale voters. In a post-election analysis, Greenberg surveyed the relatively well-off suburbanites of Oakland County, Mich., who have been leaving the Republican party, and found that among their reasons for supporting Obama were his support for middle-class tax cuts and expanded health-insurance coverage. Would Republicans turn off these voters with an economic agenda geared toward the lower middle class? We know that a Democratic agenda thus targeted has not done so.

A Republican party that advanced downscale cultural conservatives’ economic interests, meanwhile, would not need to lean so heavily on their cultural resentments to win their votes. Republicans’ caricaturing of Democrats as effete and unpatriotic latte-sippers has reinforced the GOP’s own reputation as anti-intellectual and philistine, and this reputation has harmed it in upscale precincts. An economic agenda more attractive to the country would reduce the party’s reliance on cultural polarization.

Historical trends also favor the downscale strategy. The movement of affluent social liberals into the Democratic party and working-class social conservatives into the Republican party has been going on since at least 1964, when Rockefeller Republicans defected in large numbers to vote for LBJ. Going after lower-middle-class voters would build on the trend of 1966–2004 and require reversing only the trends of the last four years. The upscale strategy, on the other hand, would require reversing trends from 1964 through the present day. It’s a taller order.

A downscale strategy would also serve the public interest. Many of the desires of affluent, socially liberal voters are worth attending to. Republicans should try, for example, to address their environmental concerns. But economic stagnation and family breakdown are taking a big toll on the lower middle class and the American dream. An economic and social agenda that helps lower-middle-class families get ahead — by, for example, encouraging marriage and reducing the cost of raising children — ought to be an urgent priority. It ought not be sacrificed for a misguided political strategy.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: badadvice; conservatism; immigrantlist; immigration; moralabsolutes; rino; rinopurge
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We tried these genius strategy with McCain and his attempt to reach out to third world immigrants and support unlimited poverty importation.

That's why McCain is president today!

;)

1 posted on 03/10/2009 1:38:04 PM PDT by GOPGuide
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To: GOPGuide

What the hell is wrong with just defining your core beliefs: low taxes, small central government, muscular defense and individual liberty, then let the electorate come to you in droves.

Those principles will win every time - why the need to go upsacle, downscale or sideways? Why the need to pander to ethnic or socio-economic groups? Conservatism appeals to ALL right-thinking people (no pun intended) that want only to be free to reap the fruits of their own labor.


2 posted on 03/10/2009 1:46:59 PM PDT by StatenIsland
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To: GOPGuide

Not interested in moving to the left.

We heard all this nonsense during the runup to the 2008 elections by various factions trying to push their favorite RINO be it Rudy, Mitt, The Huckster, or McAmnesty.

None were worthy enough to tie the shoelaces of Ronald Reagan and all they were pushing was the lie that they were conservative and that we should compromise our values and principles because we had to move to the center.

We tried that and it failed miserably.

How about we just stick to our conservative principles this time, OK?


3 posted on 03/10/2009 1:47:43 PM PDT by SoConPubbie (GOP: If you reward bad behavior all you get is more bad behavior.)
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To: GOPGuide

Seems like they’re not going to listen until us ‘regular downscale folk’ start showing up on their doorsteps with pitchforks.


4 posted on 03/10/2009 1:48:06 PM PDT by perfect_rovian_storm
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To: GOPGuide
I'm working on my next book, "Eight Events that Shaped America." One of the events involves the rise of rock and roll, and how it was exported to the Soviet bloc and helped bring down the Iron Curtain. It's truly amazing to look at how the YOUTH behind the Iron Curtain were rebelling against the very communism that these people think we need to embrace.

It's NOT ABOUT YOUNG OR OLD. It's about IDEAS.

5 posted on 03/10/2009 1:51:07 PM PDT by LS ("Castles made of sand, fall in the sea . . . eventually." (Hendrix))
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To: GOPGuide
Now the strong support for the Democrats by young people, Hispanics, and non-Christians is said to be creating an unstoppable trend toward liberalism.

Philosophically bankrupt, intellectually ignorant, individuals and collectives ALWAYS trend toward socialism.

6 posted on 03/10/2009 1:51:18 PM PDT by PGalt
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To: GOPGuide

Truth is not negotiable.


7 posted on 03/10/2009 1:53:56 PM PDT by sourcery (Obama Lied. The Economy Died!)
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To: GOPGuide

This might be worth a try if the bar separating Liberals from conservatives wasn’t stiff as a board.we move to the center,they move equally farther to the left.The liberals definition of compromise is, you come all the way over to us and we all can dance around the maypole.In my life they have never budged until you gave them something worth more than they were giving up.Holy Charlie brown football kicking Christ,how many times do we fall for this?


8 posted on 03/10/2009 1:55:12 PM PDT by mayflower1637
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To: GOPGuide

Sadly, this is nothing new for National Review. In the late 50’s they ran a book review of “Atlas Shrugs” that claimed the theme of the book was “To the gas chambers go.”


9 posted on 03/10/2009 1:57:47 PM PDT by shempy (BOYCOTT GM & CHRYSLER - support American VALUES!)
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To: GOPGuide
Did it ever enter any one’s head that the vote received might just be related to the quality of the candidate which the party runs? Think Bob Doyle, think the last old geezer that the Republicans ran for President. They have to run candidates that appeal to the voter.
10 posted on 03/10/2009 1:58:11 PM PDT by Citizen Tom Paine (Swift as the wind; Calmly majestic as a forest; Steady as the mountains.)
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To: GOPGuide
TA lot of people who had voted for Republicans started voting for Democrats. Those people are not easily categorizable.

Sure they are. They're called gullible "moderates." Or as i like to call them, idiots.

11 posted on 03/10/2009 1:58:26 PM PDT by subterfuge (BUILD MORE NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS NOW!!!)
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To: GOPGuide

The demographics look excellent for the Rats.

Single women, especially single women with children, wanting Uncle Sugar to bring home their bacon, is a huge voting bloc.

There is no way the Pubbies are going to be able to out-pander the Rats when it comes to appealing to racial blocs — the Rats are masters of dividing people by race and demonizing whites as supposedly trying to hold the other races down.

And amnesty will bring in tens of millions of poorly-educated voters who strongly supported socialists in their home country.

Since the Rat base is a cobbled-together collection of grievance groups looking to the government for sustenance, I have to wonder whether the continued economic decline of the private sector as a result of Obama’s policies will even have a significant negative effect on the loyalty of the Rat coalition.


12 posted on 03/10/2009 1:59:38 PM PDT by SirJohnBarleycorn
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To: GOPGuide
Here's what the middle-of-the-road looks (and smells) like:


13 posted on 03/10/2009 2:02:53 PM PDT by Redbob (W.W.J.B.D.: "What Would Jack Bauer Do?")
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To: GOPGuide

This is the sort of thing that keeps me from subscribing to WFB’s magazine.

I’ve been Republican all my life, with the exception of an experiment in Democratic registration in the off years to see if it would get me any better response from letters to my Democratic Congressional delegation. (it doesn’t - they ignore people in their own party too). Parents were conservative Republicans before it was cool. They worked on Goldwater’s campaign like sled dogs, and even tho Goldwater lost, that was the genesis of the Reagan revolution.

And here, we have these NR twinks coming out with this trope that Republicans live in gated communities. Well, I think this shows who they are.

It is not, however, who we are - as if all those NASCAR fans live in gated communities. Hunters and gun-toting rabble live in gated communities — riiiight. All us folks in the rural west — we have hand-hammered wrought iron over the ranch gate, don’t you know, and polo ponies instead of quarter horses. And all of us who are small businessmen and women — why, we’re just in the business of sitting up on the veranda, sippin’ mint julips while telling the hired help to “speed things up a bit there...”

Who ARE these morons within the GOP who think this crap? Well, now we know: they’re the same sort of twinks that brought us the Obama campaign: Ivy-league liberal arts majors without a clue or a real, productive job.

I’ve just about had my fill of this. If these silk pantywaists want to believe these ridiculous tropes, they can do it without me or my capital. They can go off and sip their VSOP and huff on their Cuban cigars while telling their wife to “please get off the pool boy!” from South America.

This crap makes me so furious... to hell with NR and their pack of Ivy-league blueblood pecksniffs and New York papists.


14 posted on 03/10/2009 2:03:50 PM PDT by NVDave
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To: GOPGuide

Battleground Poll question D3:
60% of Americans reliably self-identify as “very conservative” or “somewhat conservative.”
35% are “somewhat liberal” or “very liberal.”

Question for David Frum: “Which number do you think is larger?”

Careful David: this one’s tricky...


15 posted on 03/10/2009 2:10:19 PM PDT by Redbob (W.W.J.B.D.: "What Would Jack Bauer Do?")
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To: GOPGuide

There are changes in the air with the Republicans, hopefully for the better. However, change is a word associated with the Head Marxist In Charge (HMIC) BHO, so we can’t exactly coopt it.

One way for everyone to get what they want would be to dissolve the U.S., but is that feasible? Or desirable?

If the nation did dissolve into four or more regions it would lead to more voter satisfaction. Agree or not? The regions could make a pact with one another as if they were NATO and the military could remain unchanged.

Other than that, I sadly see leftist Democratic rule ad infinitum... And that’s a long time.


16 posted on 03/10/2009 2:11:55 PM PDT by Professor_Leonide (I said to the young man who showed me a photo, "Who can ever be sure what is behind a mask?")
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To: GOPGuide
The only thing more nauseating than moving to the left would be if I were to start dating Rosie O'Donnell.
17 posted on 03/10/2009 2:17:50 PM PDT by crazyhorse691 (Now that the libs are in power dissent is not only unpatriotic, but, it is also racist.)
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To: GOPGuide

Move to the center? What center?

I hate this kind of thinking. You don’t run polls to find out what you think. You don’t choose your principles based on demographics.

The first step is this: you have to know what you believe. What are your principles? Do you have any? What is for you nonnegotiable? Lets start there.

If your nonnegotiable principles put you in the minority, then you have a lot of work to do, selling, persuading, teaching. Getting elected is not an end in itself; if you have no principles then what is the point? There are plenty of politicians in office already with no principles to direct them.

Your election campaign strategy should not be to hide your views hoping you’ll get elected by mistake, or by accident. It has to be that you will teach and persuade and convince people that your views are right, and in that way build a durable majority. And in that way accomplish something that matters.

There are too many people on our side of the line who see politics as a contest between two teams, rather than a war of ideas. They are looking for the trick play that will get the quarterback across the line. They’ve lost hope of ever really convincing anyone of anything.


18 posted on 03/10/2009 2:25:37 PM PDT by marron
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To: GOPGuide

Most of the people in the gated communities - and most of the wealthy, in fact - are Dems.

Maybe if the GOP gives them an alternative, they’ll take it. So what we actually have to do is attract the gated community, but that won’t happen if we offer them exactly what the Dems offer.

I think many of them are going to get really burned on that squirrelly little radical they’ve elected, and I think they will be looking for an alternative.


19 posted on 03/10/2009 3:04:20 PM PDT by livius
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To: GOPGuide

Did you read this article before posting it? It’s neutral.


20 posted on 03/10/2009 3:06:11 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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