Electoral Map of Whites Under 30 (user search)
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  Electoral Map of Whites Under 30 (search mode)
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Author Topic: Electoral Map of Whites Under 30  (Read 3557 times)
💥💥 brandon bro (he/him/his)
peenie_weenie
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,542
United States


« on: November 27, 2020, 02:38:04 PM »

I don't buy it. There's no way zoomer/young millennial whites are anywhere below Biden+20.

Not really even if you take the most democratic exit poll for voters under 30 , they still voted for Biden 65-31 overall and given how diverse voters under 30 are there is no way Whites under 30 are Biden + 20.


I mean, maybe. It's just hard for me to believe that a majority of white 28 year-olds in Texas actually voted Trump.

Utah is also especially hard to believe. Utah has a huge age/party split.
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💥💥 brandon bro (he/him/his)
peenie_weenie
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,542
United States


« Reply #1 on: November 27, 2020, 05:08:43 PM »

Another thing that doesn't make sense: IA whites vote left of MI whites so I don't get why the numbers would be flipped for the under-30 crowd.

Maybe Michigan whites under 30 tend to be more disproportionately college-educated, given the presence of Lansing, Grand Rapids, and Ann Arbor? Iowa whites may have a pretty consistent partisan level at all age levels by contrast.

Maybe. In the case of AA, though, I'd bet that a huge portion of Michigan graduates (many of whom aren't even from Michigan) leave the state for Chicago, NY or elsewhere. Michigan is a very cosmopolitan school. MSU and the directionals though I think tend to have more students who leave the state.

Although, it's possible there's more brain drain happening from Michigan in general. Living in CO I've met way more Michiganders (and Minnesotans and Wisconsinites) than Iowans. There's probably more disposable income and liberal tendencies that inspires younger people to leave here than Iowans.

Another thing that doesn't make sense: IA whites vote left of MI whites so I don't get why the numbers would be flipped for the under-30 crowd.

Maybe Michigan whites under 30 tend to be more disproportionately college-educated, given the presence of Lansing, Grand Rapids, and Ann Arbor? Iowa whites may have a pretty consistent partisan level at all age levels by contrast.


Also the reason Iowa was a lean Dem state from 1988-2012 was cause of the farm crises , Iowa before 1988 actually had a more strongly republican history than even Kansas so I don’t think it’s that surprising a generation who doesn’t remember the farm crises reverts back to pre farm crises voting patterns

A good point that Iowa is by no means ancestrally Democratic. Certainly the farm crisis is a big reason why it started voting Democratic in 1988 (and why Mondale also did very well relatively in 1984 there), but the reason why it stuck with the Dems for the subsequent two and a half decades is more due to its northern non-Evangelical culture being a poor fit for the Southern Evangelical GOP, but Trump has managed to bring these voters to the GOP in astounding numbers.

Eh... Iowa is known for pulling more for evangelical candidates in their primaries and also voted for Bush once. Not to mention that Ernst pulverized Bruce Braley in 2014 with basically the Trump coalition before anybody associated Trump with the GOP in any meaningful way.
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