Posted on 05/14/2018 11:16:38 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The Democratic coalition of upscale whites and racial and ethnic minorities is concentrated in a few areas, leaving many states to go narrowly for the GOP.
Recently, it seems as though a growing chorus of progressives have begun to complain about how our governing institutions distort the true will of the voters. The Daily Beast recently published an illustrative example of this genre by David Faris:
The Democratic candidate has won a popular vote majority in six of the last seven presidential elections. Over that same time period, Democrats have secured 30 million more votes for the U.S. Senate than their Republican counterparts. In 2016 alone, Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by nearly 3 million votes, and Democratic candidates received 11 million more votes for the Senate. The record here is clear: Over the past 26 years, the American people have voted, over and over again, to give Democrats the authority to staff the federal judiciary with living constitutionalists, and instead what they have received is a Supreme Court that remains in the death grip of a radical, conservative majority and lower courts that have flipped back and forth between Democratic and Republican appointees. Here, as in so many other ways, American democracy has misfired by hewing to institutions and procedures cooked up over candlelight a hundred years before the invention of the internal combustion engine.
To be clear: Bill Clinton, Al Gore, and Hillary Clinton did not win popular majorities. They won pluralities. Only George W. Bush and Barack Obama have won a majority of the vote in the last 30 years. Also, Im not sure why 1876 the year the internal combustion engine was invented should serve as the demarcation point for determining whether political institutions are outmoded or still relevant.
The Left, it seems to me, has turned its ire on two main targets: the Senate and the Electoral College. The latter is simply a pass-through institution at this point; the real target of progressive frustration with the Electoral College is its apportionment of political power not strictly by population but also by state. This is the same problem that liberals have with the Senate.
There are good reasons to dislike this style of apportionment, which I have acknowledged here at NRO. But the argument is a timeless one. James Madison himself made it all the way back in the summer of 1787 (by candlelight, I should add). I am not so much interested in debating the relative merits of any given system of apportionment as in understanding why Democrats care about this issue now. The answer, I reckon, is the collapse of the Lefts traditional farmerlabor coalition.
Woodrow Wilson was the first progressive Democrat (sorry, Grover Cleveland), and he narrowly won reelection in 1916 against progressive Republican Charles Evans Hughes. This was the vindication of the farmerlabor coalition he had built four years prior. In 1916, Wilson won most of the rural South and West, while Hughes almost swept New England and performed well in the industrialized Old Northwest. For Wilson, a key difference between victory and defeat was in Ohio, where he won the manufacturing towns of Cleveland and Toledo.
Fast-forward to 1948, when Harry Truman ran as a seeming underdog against Republican Thomas Dewey. Truman pulled off the victory, despite losing much of the Deep South to Strom Thurmond, by securing a strong performance in the rural West. And again, Ohio was highly important, as Truman won Toledo, Cleveland, and Youngstown.
As the 20th century wore on, the West began migrating to the GOP. Republican Gerald Ford nearly won a full term to the White House in 1976 by sweeping the West except Hawaii. But Jimmy Carter carried the day by nearly sweeping the South and (once again) winning key industrial areas in Ohio. So, as late as 1976, the farmerlabor coalition was still holding up.
The trend of 2000 became more pronounced in 2004. And in certain places, we saw it persist during the Barack Obama years as well. Though Obama held on to the Upper Midwest, the Democratic position in places like western Pennsylvania began to collapse, as this region which had largely voted for Walter Mondale over Ronald Reagan voted for Mitt Romney in 2012. Similarly, states that had once been competitive for Democrats West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Arkansas, and Louisiana all fell solidly into the Republican column. On net, this did not make a difference, because Obama further developed the rising Democratic coalition of minorities and upscale whites to win reelection, albeit with fewer Electoral College votes and a smaller share of the popular vote than he won in 2008.
In 2016, Hillary Clinton won the same basic coalition that Obama had expanded four years prior. But the last remnants of the old farmerlabor coalition bolted to Donald Trump, who nearly swept the Midwest. He even almost took Minnesota, which has not voted Republican since 1972. Also, in a telling development, he carried Ohio by eight percentage points, a larger margin than either side has enjoyed in 30 years.
These developments show that coalitions in this country change, for all manner of social, economic, and technological regions. This is part of the natural course of our politics, and not at all lamentable. In fact, I would suggest it is a sign of civic health.
Coalitions in this country change, for all manner of social, economic, and technological regions. This is part of the natural course of our politics, and a sign of civic health.
However, the new Democratic coalition dominated by upscale whites and racial and ethnic minorities is badly organized for capturing political power in the federal government. It is heavily concentrated in a handful of states that go comfortably for Democrats, leaving many states to go more narrowly for Republicans.
To wit: Donald Trump lost the popular vote by more than two percentage points in 2016, yet he carried 30 of 50 states and won 304 Electoral College votes.
The geographic concentration inherent to the new Democratic coalition can also be appreciated by looking at the growing role California has played in the partys coalition in the past century. Wilson in 1916, Truman in 1948, Jimmy Carter in 1980, John Kerry in 2004, and Hillary Clinton in 2016 all won roughly the same share of the vote (4850 percent). California accounted for 5 percent of Wilsons nationwide vote; 8 percent of Trumans vote; 9 percent of Carters vote; 11 percent of Kerrys vote; and 13 percent of Clintons vote. That is a big increase in the relative importance of a single state. Yet California has added no additional Senate seats, and the concentration of the Democratic vote in the Golden State leaves the party vulnerable to narrow defeats in the Midwest.
All in all, the collapse of the Democratic farmerlabor coalition, and the rise of the new upscaleminority coalition, has resulted in Republicans now enjoying a noticeable edge in securing an Electoral College majority, and a huge advantage in winning a Senate majority.
I think this is why many on the Left are riled up about the Electoral College and the Senate. The structural biases of these institutions have long been noticed by just about everybody who cared to study the matter but are only recently being felt by Democrats.
Obviously it favors Republicans.
If it favored Democrats, the MSM-Democrats wouldn’t want to get rid of it. Duh.
No. It reduces the influence of the urban masses.
They just happen to be Democrats.
Clever fellows, the founders.
Popular vote favors the political party with the most states that can produce the most illegal votes.
Exactly that. The left congregates in compressed areas. The president is not elected by individual voters. It is elected by the states. When most of the leftists are located in just a few states, they will lose.
VA is a deep purple.
NC once red is a toss up.
GA was a thin red in 2016.
We will have to see how the Puerto Rican influx will impact FL.
NV, CO and NM appear to be solid blue now due to immigration and people fleeing CA....except they continue to vote dim.
Amazin, ain’t it?
They already figured out there’d be people wanting their lordships and squires back.
I rarely invoke the Federalist/Anti-Federalist ping list, but this article is so well researched and thought out that I felt it deserved a close read.
The Electoral College favors our Constitutional Republic.
California may be interesting this time around.
Koreans here are now solidly behind Trump because of the reunification possibility now showing.
Vietnamese refugees never left the conservative side...now the Koreans have seen the light.
Hoping to see a conservative orange county again? Mayhaps I dream too much.
Surprisingly, the coalition of tree huggers, sexual perversion groups environmental wackos, minority grievance sub groups and communist can’t win an election....
Who knew...
There, I fixed it.
Like most libs, they are too lazy to do the work. Better to just throw over the apple cart, storm around and get their way through brute force.
and this explains why some states are moving to cast all of their votes towards the popular national vote...
RE: I think you can safely stop reading an article on elections the moment the author confuses “majority” with “plurality.”
The author of this particular article did not.
This Senate number is meaningless. California's unusual primary system resulted in a scenario where two Democrats faced each other in the 2016 Senate election. So you had more than 12 million votes cast for two Democrats in an election that had no Republican candidate.
This is a good analysis.
However, if we were to eliminate the electoral college, Republican presidential candidates would maximize their popular vote. Of course, Dems would attempt the same. Where we would end up relative to the status quo no one knows.
As such, it is flatly not true in any sense that the Electoral College favors Republicans. There are no grounds at all for this conclusion.
Is that Constitutional?
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