The Democratic Factory Town Problem

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kalm
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The Democratic Factory Town Problem

Post by kalm »

H/T to CID and others who have been predicting this for years.
WASHINGTON — The share of the Democratic presidential vote in the Midwest declined most precipitously between 2012 and 2020 in counties that experienced the steepest losses in manufacturing and union jobs and saw declines in health care, according to a new report to be released this month.

The party’s worsening performance in the region’s midsize communities — often overlooked places like Chippewa Falls, Wis., and Bay City, Mich. — poses a dire threat to Democrats, the report warns.

Nationally and in the Midwest, Democratic gains in large metropolitan areas have offset their losses in rural areas. And while the party’s struggles in the industrial Midwest have been well-chronicled, the 82-page report explicitly links Democratic decline in the region that elected Donald J. Trump in 2016 to the sort of deindustrialization that has weakened liberal parties around the world.

“We cannot elect Democrats up and down the ballot, let alone protect our governing majorities, if we don’t address those losses,” wrote Richard J. Martin, an Iowa-based market researcher and Democratic campaign veteran, in the report titled “Factory Towns.”

Mr. Martin wrote the report in conjunction with Mike Lux and David Wilhelm, fellow Democratic strategists who, like him, also have roots in the region and worked together on President Biden’s 1988 presidential campaign.

For all the arresting data, vivid graphs and deepening red maps presented, Mr. Martin offers little guidance on how to reverse the trends. He does, however, offer a warning, one that Midwestern Democrats have been issuing since Mr. Trump’s victory five years ago.

“If things continue to get worse for us in small and midsize, working-class counties, we can give up any hope of winning the battleground states of the industrial heartland,” writes Mr. Martin.

Comparing Barack Obama’s re-election to President Biden’s election last year, he notes that Democrats gained about 1.55 million votes in the big cities and suburbs of the region surveyed. In the same period, they lost about 557,000 votes in heavily rural counties.

But in midsize and small counties, Democrats lost over 2.63 million votes between the two elections. Dubbing these communities “factory towns,” Mr. Martin separates them by midsize counties anchored around cities with a population of 35,000 or more and smaller counties that lean on manufacturing but do not have such sizable cities.

Taken together, the changes illustrate the degree to which Mr. Obama relied upon the votes of working-class white voters to propel his re-election — and how much Mr. Biden leaned on suburbanites to offset his losses in working-class communities that had once been a pillar of the Democratic coalition.

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What alarms Mr. Martin, and many Democratic officials, is whether the party can sustain those gains in metropolitan areas. It’s uncertain, as he puts it, “if moderate suburban Republicans will continue to vote for Democrats when Trump is not on the ballot.”

Democratic gains up and down the ballot in fast-growing Sun Belt states like Arizona and Georgia garnered significant attention last year. Yet Mr. Biden wouldn’t have won the presidency and Democrats couldn’t have flipped the Senate without victories in 2020 across the Great Lakes region.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/05/us/p ... aMN6xPW-7s
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Re: The Democratic Factory Town Problem

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Here comes JSO to tell us why none of this matters because Donk dominance is forewritten.
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Re: The Democratic Factory Town Problem

Post by Pwns »

It would be prudent to stop bitching about voter ID laws and the Electoral College and appeal to these people's concerns instead of affluent white Whole Foods shoppers.
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kalm
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Re: The Democratic Factory Town Problem

Post by kalm »

Pwns wrote: Wed Oct 06, 2021 11:39 am It would be prudent to stop bitching about voter ID laws and the Electoral College and appeal to these people's concerns instead of affluent white Whole Foods shoppers.
Agree to an extent but it would be stupid to ignore voter laws that disenfranchise your base. You can have the best ideas but if the mechanics don’t work in your favor…
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Re: The Democratic Factory Town Problem

Post by Winterborn »

Couldn't happen to a nicer and more inclusive political party. :roll:


Picking a individual to vote for is rapidly becoming either voting for the welfare state and the leeching it encourages or higher and higher spending on pet pork projects (and in in many cases there is no distinction, just print money).
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