The Washington Post
reports on the long-term demographic challenge facing the GOP:
“Minorities are the majority in 22 of the 100 largest U.S.
metropolitan regions,” the Post observes.
This matters, of course, because minorities, far more so than
white voters, are inclined to vote Democrat. And this helps to
explain why states such as California, which voted for Ronald
Reagan four times, are now irretrievably Democrat.
States such as Virginia, meanwhile, can no longer be counted on
to vote Republican in presidential elections. Indeed, after voting
Democrat in 2008 for the first time since 1964, Virginia is now
considered a “tossup state.”
According to the Post,
Rep. Gerald E. Connolly (D-Va.) said the growth in racial and
ethnic minorities has helped transform places such as Fairfax from
reliably moderate Republican domains to ones where Democrats
control the Board of Supervisors and that are represented in
Congress and the General Assembly by Democrats.
‘You’re going to start seeing that demographic impact
politically in the outer suburbs’ more and more, he predicted.
What’s next to fall, Texas? The GOP had better hope not: if the
GOP loses Texas, it will become a permanent minority party,
incapable of winning the White House except in a rare, fluke
election. Yet, three of the 22 minority-dominant metro regions —
McAllen, El Paso and Houston — are in Texas.
Demography is not necessarily destiny: People’s voting habits
can and do change based on changes in their economic status,
education, political campaigns, and, significantly, life
experience. The experience of marrying and raising children, for
instance, can be especially transformative politically.
But demography (and culture) also can be surprisingly stubborn
and resistant to change. Blacks and Jews, for instance, continue to
vote Democrat in large numbers, even when, it seems, liberal pols
betray them.
Still, politics is never stagnant; it is always fluid and in
flux. It will be interesting to see how minority voting patterns
evolve and develop in the coming years. One thing’s for sure: the
Republicans have their work cut out for them.