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Many Want Their State to Secede

September 19, 2014 at 10:53 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

A new Reuters poll found that almost a quarter — 23.9% — of those surveyed said they were strongly or provisionally inclined to have their states secede from the United States.

“Secession got more support from Republicans than Democrats, more from right- than left-leaning independents, more from younger than older people, more from lower- than higher-income brackets, more from high school than college grads. But there was a surprising amount of support in every group and region, especially the Rocky Mountain states, the Southwest and the old Confederacy, but also in places like Illinois and Kansas. And of the people who said they identified with the Tea Party, supporters of secession were actually in the majority, with 53 percent.”

Filed Under: Trends

Who Runs for Office?

September 3, 2014 at 12:10 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Pew Research: “Our data show that those who say they have sought office tend to be white, male and well-educated. In fact, while women account for half of the adult population, they are just a quarter of those who say they have run for office. This is in keeping with other research that has documented the imbalance… There is a similar imbalance when it comes to race and ethnicity, with whites disproportionately more likely to have sought office and blacks and Hispanics less likely to have done so.”

Filed Under: Trends

Democratic Migration Offsets Growth in Red States

August 25, 2014 at 2:59 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

The Upshot: “Over the last few decades, residents of many traditionally liberal states have moved to states that were once more conservative. And this pattern has played an important role in helping the Democratic Party win the last two presidential elections and four of the last six. The growth of the Latino population and the social liberalism of the millennial generation may receive more attention, but the growing diaspora of blue-state America matters as well.”

“The blue diaspora has helped offset the fact that many of the nation’s fastest-growing states are traditionally Republican. You can think of it as a kind of race: Population growth in these Republican states is reducing the share of the Electoral College held by traditionally Democratic states. But Democratic migration has been fast enough, so far, to allow the party to overcome the fact that the Northeast and industrial Midwest contain a smaller portion of the country’s population than they once did.”

Filed Under: Trends

Everything is Terrible

August 11, 2014 at 6:56 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Politico: “In just one week, polls found politicians of all stripes are hitting approval numbers with record lows. The president finds himself roughly as popular as a trip to the dentist. The entire Democratic Party gets the thumbs down. Oh, and so does the Republican Party.”

“Pollsters say it all adds up to a country that feels ‘everything is terrible,’ as one put it, a mood that campaigns should consider as they head into the midterm homestretch, when turnout should be all about enthusiasm — not pessimism.”

Filed Under: Trends

Trust in Government Hits New Low

August 8, 2014 at 6:57 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

A new CNN poll finds that just 13% of Americans say the government can be trusted to do what is right always or most of the time, with just over three-quarters saying only some of the time and one in 10 saying they never trust the government.

Said pollster Keating Holland: “The number who trust the government all or most of the time has sunk so low that it is hard to remember that there was ever a time when Americans routinely trusted the government.”

Filed Under: Trends

Can Democrats Flip Texas, Arizona and Georgia?

July 29, 2014 at 11:00 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Sean Trende uses Nate Silver’s demographic calculator to estimate how long it will take for Texas, Arizona and Georgia to become blue states given current population trends.

“I waited a long time. Arizona finally flips in 2036, and Georgia flips in 2048. Texas never does. Even if we double the rate of Hispanic and African-American population growth, Arizona doesn’t flip until 2024, Georgia until 2028, and Texas until 2032. On the other hand, if we assume a marginal reversion to mean for Republicans among minorities — 11 percent of the African-American vote and 32 percent of the Hispanic vote — only Arizona flips, and then only in 2044.”

Filed Under: Trends

If Voter Turnout Is Key, Why Is It So Low?

July 27, 2014 at 8:09 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Dan Balz: “Tens of millions of dollars will be spent this year in an effort to boost turnout in the November midterm elections. But the longer-term trends suggest that any marginal increase in what is expected to be a low-turnout election won’t have much effect on one of the chronic problems of America’s politics.”

Filed Under: Trends

The Voting Group That Decides Every Election

July 26, 2014 at 6:11 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

The Atlantic: “Republicans consistently win voters making $50,000 or more, approximately the U.S. median income. The margin doesn’t vary too much: In 2012, Mitt Romney got 53 percent of this group’s vote; in 2010, Republican House candidates got 55 percent. And Democrats consistently win voters making less than the median–but the margin varies widely. In fact, whether Democrats win these voters by a 10-point or a 20-point margin tells you who won every national election for the past decade.”

Filed Under: Trends

Are U.S. Elections Rigged?

July 13, 2014 at 9:29 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

A new Rasmussen survey finds that 48% of likely American voters say U.S. elections are not fair to voters, while just 39% think elections are fair and 14% are not sure.

Filed Under: Trends

Why Today’s Teens May Vote Republican

July 8, 2014 at 8:06 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

David Leonhardt: “In the simplest terms, the Democrats control the White House (and, for now, the Senate) at a time when the country is struggling. Economic growth has been disappointing for almost 15 years now. Most Americans think this country is on the wrong track. Our foreign policy often seems messy and complex, at best.”

“To Americans in their 20s and early 30s — the so-called millennials — many of these problems have their roots in George W. Bush’s presidency. But think about people who were born in 1998, the youngest eligible voters in the next presidential election. They are too young to remember much about the Bush years or the excitement surrounding the first Obama presidential campaign. They instead are coming of age with a Democratic president who often seems unable to fix the world’s problems.”

The Upshot: How birth year influences political views

Filed Under: Trends

Single Women Emerge as a Political Powerhouse

July 2, 2014 at 10:22 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

“The decline of marriage over the last generation has helped create an emerging voting bloc of unmarried women that is profoundly reshaping the American electorate to the advantage, recent elections suggest, of the Democratic Party. What is far from clear is whether Democrats will benefit in the midterm contests this fall,” the New York Times reports.

“With their Senate majority at stake in November, Democrats and allied groups are now stepping up an aggressive push to woo single women — young and old, highly educated and working class, never married, and divorced or widowed.”

Filed Under: Trends

Americans Losing Confidence in All Branches of Government

June 30, 2014 at 7:15 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Gallup: “Americans’ confidence in all three branches of the U.S. government has fallen, reaching record lows for the Supreme Court (30%) and Congress (7%), and a six-year low for the presidency (29%). The presidency had the largest drop of the three branches this year, down seven percentage points from its previous rating of 36%.”

Filed Under: Trends

Most Americans Don’t Know Which Party Controls Congress

June 26, 2014 at 3:52 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

A new Pew Research survey finds that “just 40% of Americans can correctly identify the partisan balance in both the House of Representatives and the Senate (that Republicans have the majority in the former, and Democrats in the latter). The remaining six-in-ten know only one (33%) or neither (28%) of those facts.”

Filed Under: Trends

Beyond Red vs. Blue

June 26, 2014 at 12:19 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Pew Research: “Partisan polarization – the vast and growing gap between Republicans and Democrats – is a defining feature of politics today. But beyond the ideological wings, which make up a minority of the public, the political landscape includes a center that is large and diverse, unified by frustration with politics and little else. As a result, both parties face formidable challenges in reaching beyond their bases to appeal to the middle of the electorate and build sustainable coalitions.”

Take the quiz to see where you fit in the nation’s political typology. Leave your observations in the comments.

Filed Under: Trends

Cuban Voters Shift Towards Democrats

June 25, 2014 at 10:15 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

A new Pew Research survey finds that 47% of Cuban registered voters nationwide now say they identify with or lean toward the Republican Party — down from the 64% who said the same about the GOP a decade ago.

Meanwhile, the share of Cubans who identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party has doubled from 22% to 44% over the same time period.

Filed Under: Trends

Both Sides Are Not to Blame

June 19, 2014 at 12:26 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Norm Ornstein: “Does it matter whether the polarization, and the deep dysfunction that follows from it, is equal or not, including to the average voter? The answer is a resounding yes. If bad behavior–using the nation’s full faith and credit as a hostage to political demands, shutting down the government, attempting to undermine policies that have been lawfully enacted, blocking nominees not on the basis of their qualifications but to nullify the policies they would pursue, using filibusters as weapons of mass obstruction–is to be discouraged or abandoned, those who engage in it have to be held accountable.”

“Saying both sides are equally responsible, insisting on equivalence as the mantra of mainstream journalism, leaves the average voter at sea, unable to identify and vote against those perpetrating the problem.”

Filed Under: Trends

Extra Bonus Quote of the Day

June 18, 2014 at 9:20 pm EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

“How do I say this… men in the South, they are a little effeminate. They just have effeminate mannerisms.”

— Former Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer (D), quoted by National Journal.

Filed Under: Trends

All Politics is Now National?

June 16, 2014 at 9:05 am EDT By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

“For all the talk about how partisan polarization is overwhelming Washington, there is another powerful, overlapping force at play: Voters who are not deeply rooted increasingly view politics through a generic national lens,” the New York Times reports.

“Friends-and-neighbors elections were already a thing of the past in congressional campaigns. But the axiom that “all politics is local” is increasingly anachronistic when ever-larger numbers of voters have little awareness of what incumbents did for their community in years past and are becoming as informed by cable television, talk radio and the Internet as by local sources of news. In this year’s primaries, the trend is lifting hard-liners, but it has benefited more moderate candidates in general elections.”

Filed Under: Trends

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About Political Wire

goddard-bw-snapshotTaegan Goddard is the founder of Political Wire, one of the earliest and most influential political web sites. He also runs Political Job Hunt, Electoral Vote Map and the Political Dictionary.

Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.

Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.

Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.

Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC.

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