• About Us
  • About the Founder
  • Privacy Policy

Logo

Navigation
  • Home
    • Department Description
  • Color and Culture
  • One Race Blog
  • Stereotypes
  • Racial Prejudices
  • Ethnic History
  • Teachers
  • Youth
  • Parents
  • Individual Subscription
  • Group Subscription
  • Resources & Tools

Minorities And The New American Electorate

By Youth On Race | on Apr 8, 2013 | 0 Comment
Racial Prejudices
American Electorate
Rush

Is Rush Limbaugh the de facto leader of the Republican Party? Photo Credit: Salon.com

By The Associated Press.

After the GOP's national defeat in the election, far-right commentator Rush Limbaugh told his millions of listeners: "I went to bed last night thinking we're outnumbered ... thinking we've lost the country. I don't know how else you look at this." Minorities and the new American electorate show how the future of politics may look over the next decade.

For once, Limbaugh may be factually accurate. A phenomenon that sociologists call "the rising American electorate" gradually is swinging this nation toward humane Democratic Party values — away from traditional white male rural conservative evangelical dominance.

Growing numbers of younger urban blacks, Hispanics, Asians, independent single women and other progressive groups slowly are shaping the voting populace, solidly backing programs that help average families. Remarkably, "secular" Americans who seldom attend church have become the strongest block in the Democratic base.

alt

Is there anything the Republican Party can do to appeal to a changing electorate? Photo Credit: news.linktv.org

Various polls find that such groups have little interest in more tax giveaways to the 1 percent elite, but strongly want America to invest more in jobs and education to aid the middle class.

Writing in The New York Times, Columbia University journalism professor Thomas Edsall said changed political outlooks can be seen in a Pew Research poll that found Americans under 30 — along with blacks, Hispanics and people earning less than $30,000 a year — now view capitalism as less appealing than socialism.

Robert Borosage of the Campaign for America's Future said the election outcome was predictable "in our Gilded Age of extreme inequality, with a middle class that increasingly understands the rules are rigged against them."

A progressive group called the Democracy Corps wrote:

"Barack Obama won because he recognized a new America. The president managed only 39 percent of the white vote, the lowest white percentage recorded for a winning national candidate, and suffered a 12-point swing against him by independent voters, but won both the popular vote and an Electoral College landslide by energizing voters we describe as the Rising American Electorate."

Of course, West Virginia will be among the last places to feel the U.S. demographic change. With fewer minorities and smaller urban zones, this state seems destined to remain aligned to the rural "red" camp in national balloting.

But the country keeps evolving, and the "rising American electorate" spells good news for Democratic values in the future.

Online reference: The Charleston Gazette

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Article reprinted with permission of USAonRace.com

Featured Photo Credit: Hans Deryk/Reuters

Share this story:
  • tweet

Tags: African-AmericansblackselectionsHispanicsLatinospoliticsprogressivewomen

Recent Posts

  • Mark Twain Landmark Stopped Because of Racism

    Sep 15, 2014 - 0 Comment
  • Mississippi Archivist Reflects on History of Segregation

    Sep 15, 2014 - 0 Comment
  • Freedom Summer Meeting Targets Youth

    Sep 15, 2014 - 0 Comment

Related Posts

  • Civil Rights Sit-In At Woolworth Changed Mississippi

    Jun 3, 2013 - 0 Comment
  • School Segregation Again Means Rich versus Poor

    May 22, 2013 - 0 Comment
  • Was Jim Crow Real?

    May 13, 2013 - 0 Comment

Author Description

No Responses to “Minorities And The New American Electorate”

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • About Us
  • About the Founder
  • Privacy Policy
© 2013. Youth on Race. All Rights Reserved.