WSJ
July 28 , 2008
 
Year of the Tea Party Voter 
Republicans are winning over voters who are disgruntled with  both parties.

 
By _JOHN FUND_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=JOHN+FUND&bylinesearch=true)  
It seems every election finds political pundits trying to come up with a  
shorthand description for the latest bloc of voters to exercise undue 
influence  in the current year's races. 
In 2000, "soccer moms" were the group du jour, and enough of them were  
disgusted with the Clinton scandals that they cost Al Gore the White House. In  
2004, it was "security moms," who in a post-9/11 world were concerned about 
 terrorism and the safety of their children. In 2008, a video featuring 
"Obama  Girl" captured the enthusiasm the Democratic candidate generated among 
young  voters.
 
 
This year, the hands-down winner for the key voting bloc might be called 
"Tea  Party Supporter." Public Policy Polling, a Democratic-leaning firm, 
reports a  major reason Republicans are poised to make major gains this year is 
that they  "are cleaning up with a voting bloc that accounts for 26% of the 
country and  could end up being the most important group of people at the 
polls this fall:  voters who hate both congressional Democrats and 
congressional Republicans." 
While these voters, who are mostly white and mostly male, harbor no loyalty 
 to either party, this year they are much more upset with the Democrats who 
hold  power in the White House and Congress. "The GOP has a 57-19 generic 
lead with  this group of voters that could perhaps be described as the 
angriest segment of  the electorate," reports PPP. "Their support is fueling 
the 
GOP's success right  now." 
The party-affiliation breakdown of the "pox on all politicians" segment is  
fascinating. Only 44% are Republicans, while 34% are independents and 21% 
are  Democrats. That breakdown roughly mirrors the profile of people who in 
other  polls identify themselves as Tea Party supporters. Interestingly, 
however, PPP  finds that only about 35% of the "angriest segment" actually call 
themselves Tea  Partiers. That's compared to about 25% of voters in the 
electorate as a whole  who identify themselves as Tea Party supporters.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to