Washington Post (The Fix)
By Chris Cillizza
November 30, 2015
Politics
— and political journalism — these days is full of charts, stats, facts
and maps. It's easy amid that avalanche of data to lose the thread, to
forget what really
matters when it comes to the present state of the electorate and, more
important, where the country's political future lies.
These
two charts, which ran over the weekend with a Washington Post article
headlined "The Republican field has a diversity quandary," matter — a
lot. They explain the
fundamental problem that sits at the heart of Republicans' uphill quest
to win back the White House in 2016 and beyond.
The charts are, as you probably figured out, interconnected.
The
first shows that white voters as a percentage of the overall electorate
are shrinking; the white vote has comprised a smaller and smaller
percentage of the electorate
in every election since 1992, and could potentially dip below 70
percent in 2016.
The
second shows that even as the electorate grows rapidly more diverse —
the non-white vote more than doubled over the past two decades — the
Republican Party has struggled
mightily to diversify its vote. The single most amazing/telling fact of
the 2012 election was that just one in every 10 ballots for Mitt Romney
was cast by a non-white voter. Romney won the white vote by 20 points —
the largest margin for a Republican since
Ronald Reagan's 1984 landslide — but still lost convincingly to
President Obama.
The
trend lines are clear: Whites aren't going to suddenly see their
numbers grow as a percentage of the overall electorate and the number of
Hispanics isn't going to
stop increasing. Consider this remarkable fact from the 2010 Census:
More than half of the growth in the total population of the United
States between 2000 and 2010 was the result of the increase in Latino
population. More than half!
Given
that, winning more and more of the white vote will become an
increasingly futile endeavor for Republicans if they can't find a way to
win more of the Hispanic and/or
black vote. It's a simple math problem. States such as New Mexico
(George W. Bush won it in 2004!) are no longer competitive between the
two parties because of the whitening of the GOP. Arizona and,
eventually, Texas, will move toward Democrats at the presidential
level if current demographic and political trends continue unabated.
What's
fascinating is that this demographic and electoral problem that plagues
Republicans at the presidential level isn't replicated downballot.
(Read this piece on that
subject by The Post's Dan Balz.) Subtract the White House and there's
no real debate that the Republican Party is the healthier of the two.
The GOP controls the Senate, the House, 31 governors mansions and all or
part of 38 of the nation's 50 state legislatures.
The
most likely political future for the country then is Democrats in
control of the White House and Republicans in control of just about
everything else. Which means
the two parties will be forced to work together. Or, and much more
depressingly, simply grow further and further apart.
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