Could a Republican make Vermont and/or the Black Belt competitive? (user search)
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  Could a Republican make Vermont and/or the Black Belt competitive? (search mode)
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Author Topic: Could a Republican make Vermont and/or the Black Belt competitive?  (Read 1027 times)
Death of a Salesman
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« on: July 09, 2023, 10:06:07 PM »

Republicans will eventually appeal to black voters (particularly rural black voters) based upon a shared cultural conservatism when racial appeals no longer avail them as their white base in the state gradually shrinks.  And logically, Mississippi will be the first state in which that will happen which I think should be later this decade as the baby boomers exit the stage...  

This is a common myth on this site, but it's not at all true. MS is actually becoming whiter relative to the country as time goes on.

From that chart, white TFR exceeds non-white TFR in ID, IN, KS, KY, NH, NJ, NY, UT, WV, & VT.
tied in MI, MS, MT & VA.

ID, IN, KS, KY, UT & WV are all safe R, so this has no real impact. NH and VT are so white that this shouldn't result in any shifts. But in NY and NJ this gap (which is probably growing) could result in a GOP trend over the coming decades (which is seemingly already happening for other reasons).
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Death of a Salesman
Rookie
**
Posts: 237
United States


« Reply #1 on: July 11, 2023, 10:15:11 PM »

Republicans will eventually appeal to black voters (particularly rural black voters) based upon a shared cultural conservatism when racial appeals no longer avail them as their white base in the state gradually shrinks.  And logically, Mississippi will be the first state in which that will happen which I think should be later this decade as the baby boomers exit the stage...  

This is a common myth on this site, but it's not at all true. MS is actually becoming whiter relative to the country as time goes on.

From that chart, white TFR exceeds non-white TFR in ID, IN, KS, KY, NH, NJ, NY, UT, WV, & VT.
tied in MI, MS, MT & VA.

ID, IN, KS, KY, UT & WV are all safe R, so this has no real impact. NH and VT are so white that this shouldn't result in any shifts. But in NY and NJ this gap (which is probably growing) could result in a GOP trend over the coming decades (which is seemingly already happening for other reasons).


I meant that in the sense that (white) baby boomers are the most reliable generation of Republicans in Mississippi, given they are the most conservative.  Future generations of whites in the state don't seem like they will be as in lockstep with the Mississippi GOP, therefore being less reliable voters compared to their elders.  Which is why I am suggesting it would wise for Mississippi Republicans later this decade to reach out to rural blacks in the Delta to make up the difference as the baby boomers pass on.    
Young white voters are actually more Republican in voter registration than older white voters in Louisiana.
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