About Contact Archives RSS Columns Photos

RED STATES, BLUE STATES, AND BABIES

By Michelle Malkin  •  December 5, 2004 06:35 AM

In recent years, a number of liberal pundits have argued that demographic trends–particularly the increasing number of Hispanics in the electorate–favor Democrats.

Steve Sailer and Joel Kotkin, however, have recently been calling attention to a different demographic trend–one that favors Republicans. Simply put, Red States have a higher fertility rate than Blue States. As a result, the number of electoral votes in Blue States is likely to decline over time, whereas the number of electoral votes in Red States is likely to increase. As Kotkin notes,

[T]he problem for Democrats isn’t that they are losing among families now. The real problem is that the electoral importance of both nuclear families and the communities where they are congregating is only growing. According to Phillip Longman, a demographer at the New America Foundation, Bush states had a 13 percent higher fertility rate than their blue counterparts, whose base, as he puts it, is essentially “non-replicating.”

Over the past 30 years, the bastions of the Democratic Party have been losing people. Some places such as St. Louis, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Detroit have continued to shrink in good times and bad. Since 2000, some of the bright spots among blue cities–such as Minneapolis, Chicago, Boston, and San Francisco–have begun once again to lose population.

Republican regions, by contrast, have continued to grow, in large part because they have become more attractive to families. These include places like Douglas County, Colorado, the nation’s fastest growing county, which also has the fourth highest concentration of white children as a percentage of the population of any county in the nation. Located in the Denver suburbs, the county voted two to one for Bush. The same phenomenon can be seen in other fast-growing suburban counties–also mostly white–near Minneapolis (Scott), Dallas (Rockwall, Collin), Washington, D.C. (Loudon), Atlanta (Forsyth), and Columbus, Ohio (Delaware). All have growing populations and all went between 56 and 83 percent for Bush.

What should Democrats do? Kotkin argues persuasively they must become more attentive to the concerns of suburban parents:

Democratic legislators too often seem hostile to suburban concerns, and indifferent to the aspirations of those who would like to buy a home and a small green place to call their own. In Albuquerque, for example, planners working for the local Democratic regime advocated banning backyards, an essential part of the middle-class family lifestyle. One even told a local developer that his having four children made him “immoral.” A small–and probably extreme–example? Undoubtedly. But it speaks to a stereotype that Democrats have been battling for years now: that they disdain suburbia and the families who live there. It is long past time for Democrats to start undoing that perception.

Update: Several readers have pointed me to this Wall Street Journal op-ed piece concerning abortion rates and their relationship to electoral trends. The author, Larry Eastland, concludes:

As liberals and Democrats fervently seek new voters and supporters through events, fund-raisers, direct mail and every other form of communication available, they achieve results minuscule in comparison to the loss of voters they suffer from their own abortion policies. It is a grim irony lost on them, for which they will pay dearly in elections to come.

Posted in: Abortion, Politics

Add your opinion

Note from Michelle: This section is for comments from michellemalkin.com's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that I agree with or endorse any particular comment just because I let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with my terms of use may lose his or her posting privilege.

Trackbacks

  1. bLogicus
  2. all-encompassingly
  3. Jeff the Baptist
  4. Blog enlargement 1164071849
  5. quit smoking for free

Trackback URL

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Four words about Kathleen Parker

November 19, 2008 04:40 PM by Michelle Malkin

105 Comments | 2 Trackbacks

Gagging pro-lifers in New York City

November 19, 2008 10:30 AM by Michelle Malkin

192 Comments | 5 Trackbacks

Zoning out free speech.

GOP bailout stooge to Cavuto: “It’s not your money”

November 19, 2008 05:30 AM by Michelle Malkin

105 Comments | 25 Trackbacks

Hubris.

Good riddance to Ted Stevens

November 18, 2008 09:51 PM by Michelle Malkin

39 Comments | 8 Trackbacks

E-mail from an auto industry worker

November 13, 2008 08:55 AM by Michelle Malkin

120 Comments | 12 Trackbacks

“The Big 3 has a cancer that needs to be removed.”

The GOP House leadership shuffle: Blunt steps down

November 6, 2008 12:43 PM by Michelle Malkin

79 Comments | 4 Trackbacks

Enough with the “re-branding” crap

November 5, 2008 10:52 AM by Michelle Malkin

195 Comments | 10 Trackbacks

Brand this.


Categories: Abortion, Politics


Power Line

» Turkeys on parade