Real Clear Politics
 
 
The Democratic Majority That Emerged --  And Disappeared
By _Michael Barone_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/michael_barone/)  - February 10,  2015
 
John Judis, co-author of the book "The Emerging Democratic Majority," now  
says in an article in National Journal that that majority has disappeared. 
His  title: "The Emerging Republican Advantage."  
The original book, published in the Republican year of 2002, forecast  
accurately the groups that would make up the Democratic majority coalition that 
 
emerged in the 2006 and 2008 elections: blacks, Hispanics, gentry liberals, 
 single women, young voters.
 
But as Judis writes now, that coalition has come apart. That's partly 
because  of diminished support from millennials and Hispanics, but mostly 
because 
of  additional white working-class defections and erosion among 
suburbanites unhappy  with higher government spending and taxes. 
In fact, he now says that the majority he predicted endured for only two  
elections. President Obama was re-elected with a reduced 51 percent of the 
vote,  but Republicans won the House in 2010, 2012 and 2014, and the Senate in 
2014.  Democratic strength in governors' mansions and state legislatures is 
at its  lowest level since the 1920s. 
That's in line with voting patterns that have been steady for two decades. 
In  three of the last four presidential elections, both parties have won 
between 47  and 51 percent of the vote. And in nine of the 11 House elections 
from 1994 to  2014, Republicans won between 48 and 52 percent of the popular 
vote, and  Democrats a bit less, between 45 and 49 percent. 
Democrats have had the advantage in presidential elections because their  
clusters of base voters give them more safe electoral votes. Republicans have 
 had the advantage in House and legislative elections because their voters 
are  spread more evenly around the rest of the country. 
To put this in historical perspective, neither party has really had a  
permanent majority for an extended period, as Sean Trende argues persuasively 
in 
 his book "The Lost Majority." And the two political parties' coalitions 
over the  years have been of a different character. The political cartoonists 
are right to  portray them as two different animals. 
The Republican Party has always been built around a demographic core of  
people considered by themselves and others to be typical Americans, even 
though  they are not by themselves a majority. Northern Yankee Protestants in 
the 
19th  century, white married people today. When they come up with policies 
that have  broader appeal beyond that core, they can win majorities. 
Otherwise, they  can't. 
The Democratic Party has always been a coalition of disparate groups that 
are  different from the Republicans' core. Southern whites and Catholic 
immigrants in  the 19th century; blacks and gentry liberals today. When they 
cohere, Democrats  can win big majorities. When they split apart, the party is 
a 
disorderly  rabble. 
During most of George W. Bush's presidency, Republicans had viable 
policies.  Bush was re-elected, but with only 51 percent of the vote. Then, 
with 
violence  in the streets of Baghdad and New Orleans, the Republican majorities  
disappeared. 
That, plus a strategy of running candidates tailored to local political  
terrain, gave Democrats majorities in 2006 and 2008. 
They had a chance to extend those by coming up with policies generally 
deemed  successful and which held their disparate coalition together. 
They failed on both counts. Big government policies -- the stimulus 
package,  Obamacare -- proved generally unpopular. And other Democratic 
policies 
began  splitting the party's coalition. Gentry liberals' environmental 
policies  antagonized blue collar unions and Jacksonians from West Virginia to 
Oklahoma,  once one of the party's mainstays. 
Hispanics in target-state Colorado were turned off by gentry liberal  
priorities -- abortion absolutism, gun control, opposition to fracking. Asians  
in California were repelled by attempts to re-institute racial quotas and  
preferences in higher education that directly harm them. Millennials were 
socked  with high health insurance premiums even as they searched for jobs from 
their  parents' basements. Israel supporters have been dismayed by Obama's 
Middle East  policies. 
Even if they haven't achieved permanent majorities, American parties have 
had  enduring public policy successes. Social Security (passed 1935) and the  
Taft-Hartley labor law (passed 1947) are examples. 
But it's not clear the Obama Democrats accomplished that. The 2009 stimulus 
 package's steep increases in spending were cut back by the 2013 sequester. 
Tax  increases may be pulled back. The administration has had to make 
dozens of  revisions to the still-unpopular Obamacare and may have to accept 
serious  rollbacks if it loses King v. Burwell in the Supreme Court in June. 
Republicans looking to 2016 should be aiming not at creating a permanent  
partisan majority but at developing public policies that could, unlike 
Obama's,  be successful and enduring. 

-- 
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