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Altered States - Changing Populations, Changing Parties, and the Transformation of the American Political Landscape (Hardcover)
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Altered States - Changing Populations, Changing Parties, and the Transformation of the American Political Landscape (Hardcover)
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The 2012 presidential elections represented the second consecutive
defeat for the Republican Party, and the fourth defeat out of the
last six presidential elections. In recent years both Republican
and Democratic strategists and pundits have spoken of an emerging
Democratic Party "lock" on the Electoral College and speculated
that even in the wake of Republican victories in Congress,
presidential candidates are still at a major disadvantage due to
the party's increasing demographic and geographic isolation. This
prediction flies in the face of population shifts of the last
several decades from Democratic regions (Upper-Midwest and
Northeast) to Republican-leaning regions (South and Southwest); at
the same time, it seems to follow from demographic changes favoring
an increase in the minority vote. In fact, there is an initiative
to convert Texas to a Democratic state by mobilizing Latino and
Black voters. In Altered States, Thomas Holbrook looks at electoral
change in presidential elections since 1972, documenting the
magnitude, direction, and consequences of changes in party support
in the states. He finds that the Democrats do not have a "lock" on
the Electoral College, but that their position has improved
dramatically over the past forty years in a number of formerly
competitive or Republican-leaning states in the Northeast,
Southeast, and Southwest. Republican candidates have made many
fewer gains, mostly improving their position in "misplaced,"
formerly Democratic states, such as Kentucky and West Virginia, or
in already deeply Republican states in the Plains and Mountain
West. Holbrook looks at the ways that changes in the racial and
ethnic composition of the state electorates, migratory patterns
from large Democratic states to Republican-leaning states, and
changes in the public's level of education and occupational status,
state party identification, and ideology drive these changes.
Additionally, he explores the extent to which the Republican
"problem" stems from the geographic concentration of party support.
While Democratic concentration in major metropolitan areas tends to
put them at a disadvantage in House races, as Republican votes
increasingly are concentrated in fewer states where they win by
wider margins, they may be "wasting" more Electoral College votes
than Democrats, whose supporters are more efficiently distributed.
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