Long term, what red states do Democrats have potential in? (user search)
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  Long term, what red states do Democrats have potential in? (search mode)
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Author Topic: Long term, what red states do Democrats have potential in?  (Read 1314 times)
kwabbit
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Posts: 2,799


« on: July 02, 2022, 02:53:42 PM »

Montana is overrated for this. It became more Republican in the Trump era. Its voters are elastic so 2008 Obama came close, but it's like 60% Whites without a college degree.

Texas is the obvious answer, but it's somewhat amusing that this would happen because of educated White Northerners moving into Dallas and Austin rather than the Hispanic population becoming rabidly Dem like was once thought.

Utah basically consists of a single educated urban conglomeration so it stands to trend D sharply. Kansas and Nebraska are also surprisingly urbanized and educated.

Alaska is diversifying pretty quickly too, it could be a sleeper.

Most states have some quality that makes people think they could become Democratic. See how this forum talks about Tennessee. Most of the states that could have become Dem have. Georgia, Virginia, Colorado all have realized their trendz already. North Carolina was false hope. Texas, Florida, and North Carolina are the only states that could be contested in a reasonably neutral environment this decade that Biden didn't win.
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