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About a year ago, John Judis, a left-liberal journalist at The New Republic, wrote an article arguing that a new Democratic majority was aborning and that the election of George W. Bush as president would only "delay this trend." It seemed absurd at the time: Judis was suggesting that even if Republicans started 2001 with both houses of Congress, the White House, and most of the nation's governors, they were still doomed. The election results, however, made his thesis look a lot less silly. Maybe even prescient.
Al Gore and Ralph Nader got 51 percent of the vote between them, the best showing for left-of-center candidates since 1964. In the Senate, a slew of conservative Republicans lost seats (Abraham, Ashcroft, Grams), and liberal Democrats won them (Hillary Clinton, Dayton, Corzine). For the third time in a row, Republican numbers in the House fell.
All of this has emboldened liberals. They draw further encouragement from demographic trends that they think are working in their favor. Judis argues that the McGovern coalition-minorities and affluent social liberals-is growing and, combined with labor, will make for "an enduring political majority." Ruy Teixeira, another liberal writer, says that Republicans are doing well in parts of the country that are in decline, such as West Virginia, rather than high-tech centers. Their strategy, he says, is "to round up some of the backward areas of the country and draw on sentiments that I think are on the way out."
Pat Reddy, a consultant for the California Democrats, thinks that his party will become the dominant one because of the growth of three groups with an interest in larger government: immigrants, the elderly, and single women. He writes, "The statistic that should scare Republicans is that if every close statewide race in California over the last 40 years were rerun under today's ethnic line-up, the Democrats would win all of them based on a greatly expanded Hispanic/Asian vote. By 2008, we'll be able to say the same thing about national elections."
Republicans would be very foolish indeed to dismiss these analyses out of hand. Some demographic trends do look ominous for them. But some of those trends are overrated, and they are countered by other demographic shifts. The truth is that the parties are at parity, and it's awfully difficult to see which has the advantage going into the future.
Probably the most worrisome trends for the Republicans are the increased numbers of immigrants and single women. Even if Republicans can make a dent in the huge Democratic majorities among these groups, they are extremely unlikely to drawn even in them. So as the total numbers of immigrants and single women grow, Republicans will lose ground.
But even here, it's possible to overstate the trend. Hard as it may be to believe, Hispanics helped the Republicans in the presidential contest. Bush only got a third of their votes. But the Hispanics who voted Democratic didn't matter. A lot of them-75 percent-were in California and Texas. California would have gone for Gore without them, and they didn't keep Bush from winning Texas. Cuban-Americans, meanwhile, put Bush over the top in Florida.
Source: HighBeam Research, Lefty Nation?: What the trends portend.