Why has Tennessee become so Republican? (user search)
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  Why has Tennessee become so Republican? (search mode)
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Author Topic: Why has Tennessee become so Republican?  (Read 20701 times)
Derek
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« on: April 21, 2010, 02:25:00 PM »

Tennesse reflects the southern trends well historically. It was a haven for the southern democrats between the civil war and WWII. After that the democrats went from being about states' rights to being made up of unions, minorities, and hippies, none of which are conservative or would be likely to support notions such as states' rights or traditional values OVER THEIR CAUSES. Clinton and Carter were from the south so it was different for them. Clinton would've likely lost TN both times without Perot running though. So as social conservatives trended more and more Republican, Tennessee became more Republican.
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Derek
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« Reply #1 on: April 22, 2010, 01:00:16 AM »

Tennesse reflects the southern trends well historically. It was a haven for the southern democrats between the civil war and WWII. After that the democrats went from being about states' rights to being made up of unions, minorities, and hippies, none of which are conservative or would be likely to support notions such as states' rights or traditional values OVER THEIR CAUSES. Clinton and Carter were from the south so it was different for them. Clinton would've likely lost TN both times without Perot running though. So as social conservatives trended more and more Republican, Tennessee became more Republican.

Tennessee is traditionally more Republican than the rest of its Southern neighbors, especially in the GOP's base in eastern Tennessee, which has voted Republican since the Civil War.

That is true. Even in southern democrat era Tennessee was more Republican than its counterparts, but my point was more that the democrats of those days would be the Republicans of today. I'm not sure where the Republicans of that era would fit in. I would have been a democrat until Reagan, but would've started voting Republican in Presidential Elections with Eisenhower with the exceptions of Carter in 1976 and Clinton in 1996.

Tennessee voted for Harding, Hoover, Eisenhower, and Nixon at times when the Democratic Party still dominated most of the South.
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Derek
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« Reply #2 on: April 23, 2010, 04:30:03 PM »

liberal leftist socialists embracing the European left
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Derek
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« Reply #3 on: April 27, 2010, 02:52:16 PM »

Ignorant redneck conservatives embracing the religious right.

That's a large part of it, but I don't think Tennessee swung GOP this year because of race alone because if you look at 2006, Harold Ford Jr. almost won the open U.S. Senate seat and he won a significant number of these rural counties that swung so far away from Obama. Even in the primary, these rural counties went solidly and strongly for Hillary (she may actually have won Tennessee seeing as how it went both times for Bill). I don't know; it's an intriguing phenomenon. I think the Southernization of the Republican Party is helping Tennessee become redder in its political leanings, and in the rural areas, I'm sure the GOP's scare tactics of using God guns and gays to get their base out probably works wonders.

Lake County, the small county in the northwestern part of the state, is interesting as well because as far back as I can tell, it has gone Democratic except for this year. I believe that's Tiptonville, if memory serves me correctly.

If McCain was smarter, then he would've won PA by continuously playing Obama's racial slurs about whites who cling to their guns and religions in PA. I am a western PA native and I will always cling to God and my guns. Come get them because I'll be waiting.
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Derek
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« Reply #4 on: April 30, 2010, 12:57:21 PM »

Gore was elected to the senate in 1984 and 1990 though. That's an eternity in politics.
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Derek
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« Reply #5 on: April 30, 2010, 01:48:45 PM »

No 30 years of the Democrats moving to the left on social issues turned them and 2000 was the breaking point. Clinton won by about a point both times.
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Derek
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« Reply #6 on: May 01, 2010, 04:47:21 PM »

No 30 years of the Democrats moving to the left on social issues turned them and 2000 was the breaking point. Clinton won by about a point both times.

What are you talking about, exactly? Clinton never won Tennessee just by a point either time he ran for President and in his entire electoral history in Arkansas I see nothing to suggest he won anything by a point either. So what on earth are you referencing?

Clinton didn't win by much and never broke 47%. It's very difficult to trace trends over the last quarter of the 20th century due to the Reagan and Bush 88 landslide. TN also voted for Nixon in 1960 and even for Eisenhower once so to say it was overwhelmingly democratic is incorrect. It's been overwhelming conservative on social issues.
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Derek
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« Reply #7 on: May 02, 2010, 03:33:55 AM »

Tennessee 1952-2008

1952- Eisenhower
1956- Eisenhower
1960- Nixon (who lost as a Republican)
1964- Johnson
1968- Nixon
1972- Nixon
1976- Carter
1980- Reagan
1984- Reagan
1988- Bush
1992- Clinton
1996- Clinton
2000- Bush
2004- Bush (overwhelmingly)
2008- McCain (lost as a Republican)

Now you can see that in modern day history TN has never voted for a democrat who last and 2 republicans have carried it despite losing the election. It used to be a bellwether state and throughout the 2000's moved to the right. There isn't a presidential election other than Carter where the democrat candidate won by a landslide. Yes, like any other state south of the Mason Dixon they supported Jimmy Carter more than in other states.
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Derek
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« Reply #8 on: May 02, 2010, 10:37:51 PM »

Idk what's so hard to understand about it either lol. I think alot is being over analyzed for Tennessee on here.
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Derek
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« Reply #9 on: July 08, 2010, 11:53:53 PM »

I don't think Tennessee is doing trending Republican. Look at what will probably happen this November: the GOP stands very likely to pick up the Governor's Mansion as well as two, possibly three, U.S. House seats (TN-04, TN-06 and TN-08) and will probably expand their majorities in the state legislature. After November 2010, I think it will be safe to officially label Tennessee as a red state.

What do you mean it's not trending Republican then?
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