Real Clear Politics
 
November 3, 2010 
Exit Polls: Unprecedented White Flight from Democrats
By _David  Paul Kuhn_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/?author=David+Paul+Kuhn&id=14532) 


Democrats performed worse with whites on Tuesday than in any other  
congressional election since the Second World War. 
Democrats' white problems stretch back nearly a half-century. Political 
white  flight changed course with the implosion of George W. Bush's presidency, 
the  Republican Party and the economy in September 2008. 
 
 






Today, it's almost as if none of that ever came to pass. Democrats' bad old 
 days are back, and in an especially bad way. 
Republicans won whites in Tuesday's national House vote by a 22-percentage  
point margin (60 to 38 percent) according to exit polls. In 2006, 
Republicans  won whites by a mere 4 points. Whites shifted at three-fold the 
rate of  
Hispanics between the two midterms, while the black vote remained steady.  
Democrats faired even worse than in 1994, when Republicans won whites by 16  
points (58 to 42 percent) and with them, a landslide. 
Now comes a House landslide unseen since 1938. Presidents are the ghost  
candidates of midterms. In fact, more voters said Obama was a factor in their  
vote than said Bush was a factor four years ago. 
In this vein, Democrats' problems with whites reflect whites' problems with 
 Obama. Whites' support for Democrats in 2010 roughly matches the 
president's  standing prior to the September 2008 crash. Before the crash, 
Obama 
polled like  earlier Democratic nominees with whites. After the crash, Obama 
earned the  support of more white men than any other Democrat since 1976. He 
also improved  with white women, winning a traditional share for Democrats. 
Those gains are gone. Obama's approval rating with whites has declined from 
 the low 60s (week one) to the high 30s (this week). 
We will hear charges of racism. But independent whites who voted for Obama  
have not suddenly realized he's black. Many independents were willing to 
gamble  on Democrats. Their support for Republicans was spent. But Democrats  
misinterpreted the gamble for an investment. And the Democratic House broke. 
 This is not the first president to experience buyer's remorse. 
The recession was the dominant factor for voters this year. But the 
recession  cannot be separated from Obama's agenda. It's said that governing is 
choosing.  Obama's priorities were not the majority's priorities, especially 
not whites.  Most whites have favored a smaller government over a bigger 
government for  decad_es. Obama's agenda heralded the return of big government, 
or active-state  liberalism. He gave the boldest liberal push since the Great 
Society. 
But Democratic leaders, and much of the "professional left," ignored 
history.  In fact, they ignored the present. I wrote an essay_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2009/01/democrats_year_less_change_tha.html)
   at 
the close of 2008 illustrating why Democrats' historic problems with whites  
endured, why Obama's election was more chance than change, warning that the 
past  has a way of catching up with progressives. 
The past has caught up. Democrats chose legislation on healthcare and 
climate  change over major jobs initiatives. They chose LBJ over FDR. By the 
time 
 Democrats tried to move to jobs, whites had already moved on. Yesterday,  
Democrats lax focus on jobs created many new Republican jobs (in politics). 
Lyndon Johnson's domestic programs lost whites support in polls by 1966, 
and  with them the majority. Obama has proceeded like Johnson and received a 
like  rebuke. Only about a third of white men and white women approved of 
Obama's  signature domestic legislation, healthcare, at the time of its 
passage. Whites  similarly opposed the stimulus. It's no accident that over the 
summer of 2009,  when healthcare dominated the debate, Obama first lost the 
majority of whites  and independents. 
The keyword is "lost." Voters equally disapprove of both parties. Democrats 
 lost whites. Republicans did not win them. This election was not a vote 
for  Republicans anymore than 2006 was a vote for Democrats. We just witnessed 
an  historic no confidence vote. 
Those lost are not simply "soccer moms" or "NASCAR dads." Only 35 percent 
of  white men voted for Democrats compared to 40 percent of white women. That 
marks  a 9-point Democratic loss with both blocs since 2006. Democrats 
performed  especially poorly with white women compared to past House 
elections-- 
6 points  worse than in 1994. In post-war congressional elections, 2010 
signifies  Democrats' worst showing with white women and the floor of 
Democrats' standing  with white men. 
Democrats also performed slightly worse with white independents than in any 
 House contest since at least the Reagan era. Same story with college and  
non-college educated whites, as well as white seniors. The losses threaded 
the  suburbs, small towns and rural areas. This was not a wave isolated to 
any swing  vote trope or slice of whites. 
This was broad white flight. And it crossed a symbolic threshold. Among  
whites, for the first time in post-war congressional elections, Republicans 
hit  the 60-point level of support and Democrats fell below the 40-point mark. 
Obama will not easily win these voters back. Whites constitute a smaller  
share of the electorate than in decades past. And their influence is greater 
in  midterms than White House contests. Yet Ohio captures the presidential 
problem.  The GOP swept every contest in the mega swing state. Obama cannot 
win back Ohio  without winning back whites. 
Midterm landslides do not consistently telegraph presidential outcomes. It  
did not for Clinton's Democrats in 1994. It did for Johnson's Democrats in  
1966. 
Democrats' white problems today can be partly traced back to the politics 
of  1966. One labor report following the 1966 midterm warned Democrats that, 
"The  repudiation of the Democratic Party reached deeply into the political  
structure." The analysis alerted liberal leaders to a "white backlash" 
against  Democrats from Northern blue-collar and middle-income areas to the 
South. And  with civil rights, _Vietnam_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/vietnam/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 
,  fissures between white and blue collar Democrats, divisions over crime, 
defense,  culture and the role of government, white FDR Democrats, like 
Reagan himself,  reconsidered their political allegiance. 
They came to be known as Richard Nixon's "silent majority." Later we knew  
them as Reagan Democrats. And they are now Obama's problem, like so many  
Democrats before him

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