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Brian Villanueva's avatar

I did this same analysis with my civics students on Monday and can confirm it completely. We also looked at 2004-2024 trends, and over that time, the party realignment is obvious. Age, sex, race: none of these moved (Latinos and Asians +20 points Dem during Obama and have now shifted fully back and are trending Rep.) What did move? The poor (<$50K) went +10 Rep; the rich ($100K+) +10 points Dem. A partisan educational gap did not exist in 2004; today a BA/BS makes you 20 points more likely to vote Dem vs someone who has never been to college.

However, on the basis that "if your enemy insists on shooting himself in the foot, you should let him", I'm all-in on the media narrative. Don't look a the data, please! Racist, sexist white guys; they kept Kamala out.

Key takeaways:

1) The Democrats hitched their cart to a pony instead of an ox. The educated and wealthy are powerful groups to have, but in sheer numbers, they are dwarfed by the non-college working class. Abandoning the latter for the former was a Dem mistake. (Thanks Barack.)

2) Racial and sexual identity politics is a failure. However, these trends are tied into postmodernism, the de-facto religion of the educated-class, which will make ending them hard for the Democrats. Walking back "men can get pregnant" and "slicing the boobs off of teenage girls is empowerment and liberation" is going to be harder than they realize.

3) 1950-2000 was weird. Most nation's politics are essentially aristocracy vs everyone else. Maybe it was the Cold War, but that class-partisanship divide largely evaporated over the last half of the 20th century, which allowed American politics to reorient around race and sex and a bunch of other weird postmodernist criteria. That's over. Class matters again.

4) The realignment is past tense. The GOP could certainly screw it up (they're masters at that), but the Dems have systematically lost credibility with 2 generations of the working class. Their kids might rejoin the Party, but those generations are likely gone.

"Stealing Elections Still Is A Tall Order" Thank you for being willing to say this, Max. Because of our decentralized management and electoral college, America likely has the most secure national elections in the history of the world. (State level offices may be more susceptible to fraud -- ala WI. That could be largely eliminated with voter ID and a return to "election day" as you suggest.)

I marvel that the Left's ability to endure whiplash. "Biden is George Washington" becomes "Biden is a senile fool" in less than 2 hours. "Trump is Hitler" morphs to "Biden's so nice to have Trump for tea" in a couple of days. Do they actually believe in anything other than their own power and holiness?

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Kyle's avatar

Honestly, I’m pretty optimistic about the next few months. Trump decisively winning all seven battleground states only hours after the polls closed, plus him winning the popular vote, has taken the wind out of the sails of the #Resistance people. What I was most nervous about was a contested election. I genuinely think riots and mass protests were on the table no matter who won, provided it was close—say, Donald Trump winning Pennsylvania by 2,000 votes, or Kamala Harris winning the Electoral College by literally one vote (holding the Blue Wall + winning that Nebraska district.) But Trump’s dominant victory sends a message that has even a lot of partisans rethinking their priors. Nobody apart from the talking heads feels cheated—they’re just shocked they lost so badly.

Democrats will be motivated to cull the most extreme policy positions from their membership, although I think it’ll take a while to destroy the positive feedback loop re: trans issues, DEI initiatives, etc. (Lots of Democrats are more interested in winning than in being ideologically pure, but so many of the DEI types stand to lose their livelihoods that I expect them to fight tooth and nail to maintain their status in our institutions. Republicans will do the heavy lifting of expelling these people from the public teat, while pragmatic Democrats will breathe a sigh of relief that their far-left flank gets eviscerated without them having to take the heat.)

What worries me is that perhaps Trump axes so much of the bureaucracy so quickly—there’s talk of firing hundreds of people from the NIH, eliminating the Department of Education, and creating a board that will remove three- and four-star generals—that it unnerves the public and makes it hard to govern. That being said, I wholeheartedly endorse him thinking outside the box and purging the Deep State, so to speak. Trump’s first term was full of leaks and palace intrigue because 1) the bureaucracy was unanimously against him, and 2) the Republican Party was staffed by the Old Guard, who weren’t completely on board with Trump’s policies and thought they could outlast him. Oops on both counts—the guy’s been through the ringer, his life has been totally upended ($500 million judgment, bullsh*t felony convictions, FBI raids, biased media coverage, getting shot at, etc.), and he’s going to take a wrecking ball to anyone who stood up to him. Tough.

I’m sure there’ll be some amount of nepotism, chaos, and corruption within his second term, but it pales in comparison to what’s going on right now under Biden. I just don’t know how far the Deep State will go to keep their perch in society…

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