THE COOK REPORT
For Republicans, Just Doing the Math is Frightening
The GOP's strength is older white voters. But to win elections, it needs to 
 appeal to youth and minorities. 

 
 
It was Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., is preparing a push for an  
immigration-reform proposal that promises to be the first real test of whether  
Republicans have learned a lesson from the Nov. 6 election results. GOP  
presidential 
nominee Mitt Romney and congressional Republicans won the white  vote by 
numbers normally seen in landslide victories, and they also won  independents 
by 5 and 7 percentage points, respectively. But Romney lost the  election 
nationally by almost 4 points, and the GOP lost the overall popular  vote for 
the House of Representatives. Although winning big among white voters  and 
carrying the independent vote is necessary for GOP victories nationally,  it’s 
no longer sufficient to win. 
The white share of the vote in presidential elections has dropped 15 points 
 over the past six elections, from 87 percent in 1992 to 72 percent in 
2012. This  trend has little to do with Barack Obama, the nation’s first 
African-American  president. The declines from one presidential election to the 
next have been  consistent: a 4-point drop from 1992 to 1996, 2 more points in 
2000, 4  additional points in 2004, 3 points in 2008, and 2 points last 
year. 
At the same time, the Republican share of the minority vote is getting  
grisly. Among the 13 percent of voters who are black, Obama won by 87 
percentage  points, 93 percent to 6 percent, while congressional Democrats won 
by 83 
points,  91 percent to 8 percent. Latinos made up 10 percent of last year’s 
electorate  and gave the president a 44-point edge, 71 percent to 27 
percent, while  congressional Democrats had a 38-point advantage, 68 percent to 
30 
percent. The  Asian-American vote—3 percent of the electorate and now the 
fastest-growing  ethnic group—sided with Obama by 47 points, 73 percent to 26 
percent;  congressional Democrats won by a 1-point-wider margin, 73 percent 
to 25  percent. 
According to a Nov. 14 report by the Pew Research Hispanic Center, 40 
percent  of the population growth of citizens of voting age between now and 
2030 
will be  Hispanic, 21 percent will be black, and 15 percent will be 
Asian-American. Only  23 percent of that growth will be white. Indeed 50,000 
Latinos 
will turn 18  years of age each month for the next 20 years. The Census 
Bureau reported last  year that 50.4 percent of all births in the U.S. in the 
12 months ending July 1,  2011, were among minorities; 49.5 percent were 
among non-Hispanic whites. 
This is simply math. As long as Republicans drive minority voters away, 
they  will not be a nationally competitive party. Sure, congressional district  
boundaries, as currently drawn, will most likely keep the GOP in the House  
majority for the duration of this decade and until the 2022 election, the 
first  after the next census. But Republicans had better pray that the 2020  
gubernatorial and state legislative elections go their way and they can get  
another favorable remapping; otherwise, their situation in the House could  
change markedly as well. 
But the GOP’s problems aren’t just about race and ethnicity. While  
Republicans still do better than Democrats among voters 40 and older,  
particularly those over 65, they are losing to Democrats among voters in their  
30s—and 
losing badly among those under 30. As someone who just turned 59, I can  
make this next provocative statement: Democrats are doing better among voters  
who can be considered the future. Republicans are doing well among those 
who  could be described as the pre-dead. 
As those voters whose political identities were strongly influenced by the  
success of Ronald Reagan’s presidency and the less-than-successful tenure 
of  Jimmy Carter begin to lose their share of the electorate, and those whose 
 political identities were formed during less auspicious times for the GOP  
increase their share, the future looks troubling for the Republican Party. 
Next, look at gender politics. You could once suggest a half-empty, 
half-full  assessment of the political gender gap. Yes, Republicans have a 
problem 
with  female voters, but Democrats also have a problem with male voters. 
Keep in mind,  though, that female voters outnumber males and that women live 
longer. In the  past two presidential elections, 53 percent of the electorate 
was female. But  worse for Republicans, the vote wasn’t symmetrical. Romney 
and congressional  Republicans won the male vote by 7 and 8 percentage 
points, respectively; Obama  and Democrats won the larger women’s vote by 11 
points. That’s a losing equation  for the GOP. 
For now, the friendly enclaves afforded them by those who drew the  
congressional districts protect a majority of House Republicans. GOP  
gubernatorial 
candidates and other statewide political hopefuls also have some  shelter 
because nonfederal races tend to be fought in a slightly less  ideologically 
driven context, and are less affected by politics out of state and  in 
Washington. But for Republicans who want their party to do more than simply  
hold 
a majority of the House—particularly those who hope to gain more than just  
one-third of the governing responsibility—the GOP needs to stop digging h
oles  and start filling some in. 
This article appeared in the Saturday, January 19, 2013 edition of  
National Journal.

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