- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Remember the Republican party is not the TEA party movement, so I think a lot of this analysis is aimed at the current party establishment. The hostile takeover of the party from the inside by the TEA party movement is an ongoing process, but I am not sure it can be completed by 2012, or even 2016 for that matter:
http://conhomeusa.typepad.com/therepublican/2010/12/ryan-streeter-this-is-the-second-of-a-three-part-series-on-a-republican-agenda-for-middle-america-part-3-will-run-after-chr.html
http://conhomeusa.typepad.com/therepublican/2010/12/ryan-streeter-this-is-the-second-of-a-three-part-series-on-a-republican-agenda-for-middle-america-part-3-will-run-after-chr.html
The "purple problem," low wages, values and independent voter preferences: Republicans may be losing middle America after all - Part 2 in Ryan Streeter's 3-part series
Ryan Streeter
This is the second of a three-part series on a Republican agenda for middle America. Part 3 will run after Christmas weekend.
Yesterday, I looked at two ways that Republicans are winning in Middle America. Today I look at four ways they’re losing the middle.
Jobs and wages: Middle class wage stagnation has been around awhile, and the GOP has not put forward a plan to address it. Many smart observers have made the point for a long time that health care costs are dragging down wages, and they’re right. By fixing the tax code’s treatment of health insurance, we could free up more business revenue for wages. But beyond the health care reform implications of this view, the GOP has had little to show for an aggressive growth agenda whose primary units of measurement would be rising wages and new jobs across the broad middle of America’s income scale.
Republicans have gotten too comfortable assuming Republican support. With unemployment at 15 percent for people with anything lower than a college degree, nothing’s a given.
Values: Traditional Republican values are no longer the same things as middle class values. We once thought of Republican values as most at home in America’s middle class. Not anymore. Divorce rates and out-of-wedlock child-rearing and –bearing have skyrocketed among middle class families since the 1980s. This was brought to light recently by a report from the University of Virginia’s Brad Wilcox, which garnered a lot of public attention for documenting this troubling trend - which the National Review’s Rich Lowry termed “social and economic evisceration of a swath of Middle America.”
The middle class is supposed to be the part of America to which you “graduate” if you’re poor but ultimately embrace work, values, and family. Alas, the middle class has begun looking more like what conservatives used to lament as the broken society of the lower class. And no one seems to have noticed. But Wilcox’s study wasn’t the first time someone pointed this out. For instance, Kay Hymowitz noted 4 years ago in City Journal that America had formed into “two nations” in which high-earning educated women were divorcing less and less by 1990 while less-educated, lower-income women “continued on a divorce spree for another ten years.” Hymowitz’s conclusions come from a study published in 2004. This isn’t new news. Conservatives have just been quietly looking away.
Middle spectrum voters: The Republicans are losing the fastest-growing parts of the middle electorate. As Joel Kotkin noted last week on ConservativeHome, millennials and Latinos represent the most significant part of the middle that trends “progressive.” This “does not mean they will not shift center or even center-right over time but Republicans have much work to do on getting them to shift. Both groups are right now voting about two to one for Democrats.”
Republicans have shown that they can do well among Latinos, though they’ve shown they can also alienate them in a heartbeat, too. Millennials, who will constitute 1 out of every 3 voters in 10 years, are even more of a question mark for Republicans. Currently, they trend away from the GOP in a pretty serious way.
The “purple problem”: The fastest-growing states are red, but the fastest-growing sections within them may be blue. Despite the Census’s good news for Republicans this week, it may be the case that population growth in otherwise red states is driven by surging blue populations within them. I noted yesterday that states gaining congressional seats are benefitting from policies that Republicans promote. Uber-demographer Michael Barone makes a similar point. However, as Michael Shear pointed out at the Caucus, and as Christopher Beam recounts in his post, the hidden gem for Democrats may be that the real drivers of growth favor their party.
We’ll know more about this as the Census releases more data, but the GOP should be uneasy about this. While Republican-esque policies may create environments in which people want to live, that doesn’t mean that the churning, burgeoning suburban cauldrons of diverse entrepreneurs, professionals, managers and working class families will vote red.
The Republican party is living a paradox. On the one hand, it "owns" the middle class while the Democrats "own" the low-income and super-rich segments of the voting public. But on the other hand, the trends discussed here suggest the GOP's grip on middle America is slipping - significantly. The good news for Republicans is that the Democrats don't have much more to offer middle America than a politics of resentment. The GOP can get ahead if it starts planning now. I would argue that the 2012 presidential contender who internalizes these concerns and addresses them head-on will do well indeed.