MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
By Steve Peoples @ AP.com, 1 hr. ago
SMETHPORT, Pa. (AP) — Some Democrats in rural Pennsylvania are afraid to tell you they’re Democrats.
The party’s brand is so toxic in the small towns 100 miles northeast of Pittsburgh that some liberals have removed bumper stickers and yard signs and refuse to acknowledge publicly their party affiliation. These Democrats are used to being outnumbered by the local Republican majority, but as their numbers continue to dwindle, those who remain are feeling increasingly isolated and unwelcome in their own communities.
“The hatred for Democrats is just unbelievable,” said Tim Holohan, an accountant based in rural McKean County who recently encouraged his daughter to get rid of a pro-Joe Biden bumper sticker. “I feel like we’re on the run.”
The climate across rural Pennsylvania is symptomatic of a larger political problem threatening the Democratic Party heading into the November elections. Beyond losing votes in virtually every election since 2008, Democrats have been effectively ostracized from the overwhelmingly white parts of rural America, leaving party leaders with few options to reverse a cultural trend that is redefining the political landscape [....]
Barack Obama won 875 counties nationwide in his overwhelming 2008 victory. Twelve years later, Biden won only 527. The vast majority of those losses — 260 of the 348 counties — took place in rural counties, according to data compiled by The Associated Press.
The worst losses were concentrated in largely white areas across the Midwest: 21 rural counties in Michigan flipped from Obama in 2008 to Trump in 2020; Democrats lost 28 rural counties in Minnesota, 32 in Wisconsin and a whopping 45 in Iowa. At the same time, recent Republican voter registration gains in swing states such as Florida and North Carolina were fueled disproportionately by rural voters.
Biden overcame rural losses to beat Trump in 2020 because of gains in more populous Democratic counties. Perhaps because of his victory, some Democratic officials worry that party leaders do not appreciate the severity of the threat [....]
Comments
Just a reminder: Barack Obama had black skin and a strange foreign-sounding name and he won the presidential race in many of these areas.
by artappraiser on Thu, 02/17/2022 - 2:37pm
A lot of these areas are now filled with people who fled blue states that were becoming out of financial reach. People assume they will vote blue when they move red but that may not always be true.
by Orion on Thu, 02/17/2022 - 3:09pm
There is a reference to the AP story above at the end of the article but many other examples are given
by artappraiser on Fri, 02/18/2022 - 6:42pm
This kind of GOP candidate, wherever they might appear in Wisconsin (outside of two counties, Milwaukee and Dane, which are reliably left), not just rural but small towns and small cities, will lose. Conversely, any GOP candidate who decries this kind of thing will win over any Democrat. In the whole state, north and south. I have zero doubt about this:
They may have liked seemingly rational Trump but they don't like crazy Trump. They are basically Biden kinda people!
by artappraiser on Sat, 02/19/2022 - 7:14am
What happened to Russ Feingold 2016? Too liberal in a shifting state?
by PeraclesPlease on Sat, 02/19/2022 - 8:38am