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The paradigm has come under criticism on a number of fronts. Firstly, many argue that the usefulness of assigning partisanship to states is only really useful as it pertains to the [[Electoral College]], a winner-take-all system of elections. The Republican and Democratic parties within a particular state may have a platform that departs from that of the national party, sometimes leading that state to favor one party in state and local elections and the other in Presidential elections. [[Arkansas]] and [[West Virginia]] were won by George W. Bush in 2004, but Democrats comprise the majority of officeholders in those states. [[New Hampshire]] and [[Maine]] both have two Republican senators but voted for John Kerry in the [[U.S. Presidential election, 2004|2004 Presidential election]]. |
The paradigm has come under criticism on a number of fronts. Firstly, many argue that the usefulness of assigning partisanship to states is only really useful as it pertains to the [[Electoral College]], a winner-take-all system of elections. The Republican and Democratic parties within a particular state may have a platform that departs from that of the national party, sometimes leading that state to favor one party in state and local elections and the other in Presidential elections. [[Arkansas]] and [[West Virginia]] were won by George W. Bush in 2004, but Democrats comprise the majority of officeholders in those states. [[New Hampshire]] and [[Maine]] both have two Republican senators but voted for John Kerry in the [[U.S. Presidential election, 2004|2004 Presidential election]]. |
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Some conservatives have also been wary of using the ''red state'' term to describe conservative or Republican-voting electorates, as the term had previously most often been associated with socialist states, like [[Cuba]], [[China]], and [[East Germany]]. However, it may by argued that a color scheme associating red with the Democratic Party would have never become widely popularized since Democrats would have been |
Some conservatives have also been wary of using the ''red state'' term to describe conservative or Republican-voting electorates, as the term had previously most often been associated with socialist states, like [[Cuba]], [[China]], and [[East Germany]]. However, it may by argued that a color scheme associating red with the Democratic Party would have never become widely popularized since Democrats would have been just as reluctant to associate themselves with a color that has been historically perceived as associated with "un-American" communism. |
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However, a switch in colors would make more sense as far as historical political ideologies are concerned. Speaking with no political bias, the Democratic Party's predominately liberal view points that favor more government involvement in society, are closer to that of the eastern communist countries, and the Republican Party's predominately conservative view points are closer to that of the western capitalist countries during the cold war whom like today's conservative Republicans, wanted less government involvement in society. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 02:31, 6 June 2007
- Blue States redirects here. For the musical band of that name, see Blue States (band). For the film, see Blue State (film).
- Red States redirects here. For other uses of the term, see Red state.
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/ec/2004_US_elections_map_electoral_votes.png/300px-2004_US_elections_map_electoral_votes.png)
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b4/ElectoralCollege2000-Large-BushRed-GoreBlue.png/300px-ElectoralCollege2000-Large-BushRed-GoreBlue.png)
Red States and Blue States refer to those states whose residents predominantly vote for the Republican Party or Democratic Party presidential candidates respectively. The term began to emerge in mainstream political discussion following the 2000 presidential election. However, the term gained ubiquitous status after the 2004 presidential elections.(See Origins of current color scheme)
Details on the actual electoral geography can be found at Electoral geography of the United States.
The divide
The maps that have emerged from recent U.S. elections follow a sharply-defined geographical pattern. The Red states tend to fall in the South, the Great Plains, and the Intermountain West, with the Blue states in the Northeast, the Great Lakes Region and the West Coast.
The county-by-county and district-by-district maps reveal that the true nature of the divide is between urban areas/inner suburbs and outer suburbs/rural areas. In "solidly Blue" states, most of the counties outside the major heavily urban areas voted for Bush. In "solidly Red" states, most of the urban areas voted for John Kerry (with exceptions of Dallas; Houston; Phoenix; San Antonio; Salt Lake City; Colorado Springs; Oklahoma City; Tulsa; Wichita; Cincinnati; Omaha, NE; Virginia Beach; Birmingham, Alabama; Jacksonville; and Tampa.)
Red states and Blue states have several demographic differences from each other. The association between colors and demographics was notably made in a column by Mike Barnicle, and reinforced in a controversial response from Paul Begala (though the association between demographics and voting patterns was well known before that).
The most common observation is that the majority of Red states tend to feature more rural areas, with agriculture being one of the most important industries.[citation needed] The majority of Blue states tend to be more urban, have higher per capita income, higher levels of post-secondary education and are more multicultural (even in such "Blue" strongholds as California and New York, the GOP won the slight majority of the white vote in 2004).[citation needed] These demographic trends, along with less obvious correlations, have been analyzed in detail by conservative pundit Steve Sailer.
It is a common misconception however that the blue states are the rich and well educated portion of the country, while the red states are the mostly poor, uneducated portion that consists of only white trash people. In fact, from the 2004 election exit polls, it is shown that even though it was a small difference, the Bush voters tended to consist of the richer class with higher employment rates as well as having the higher amount of high school and college graduates (excluding post-graduates).[1] While the Republicans did receive the large majority of the rural, sparsely populated areas; they also won the majority of the suburban areas in most every state, red and blue.[1] The suburbs contain most of the middle and upper class and are predominantly white. People living in the suburbs usually tend to be wealthier and have highier education levels than those living in the urban inner cities and rural country-side.
While it is true that the Democrats did win the large majority of the heavily urban areas, it does not mean that the voters were all wealthy with higher education levels than those who voted for the Republicans. In fact, the areas in which Democratic voters are the highest are the highly populated, poor, inner city areas that have large black or African-American populations.[1] These areas are often stricken with crime, poverty, low education attainment, drug dealing, and a high percentage of single parents whom receive welfare. Just as Republicans held the more suburban and rural areas of both the red and blue states, the Democrats received the large majority of the urban city areas in all the states.[1]
An exception to all of this however, are the New England, much of Costal California (especially the San Francisco Bay), and Seattle areas which are largely made of very wealthy, white, college educated peoples whom vote very liberal Democratic.
Purple States
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/be/2004_US_elections_purple_counties.png/200px-2004_US_elections_purple_counties.png)
The political and demographic applications of the terms have led to a temptation to presume this arbitrary classification is a clear-cut and fundamental cultural division. Given the general nature and common perception of the two parties, "red state" implies a conservative region or a more conservative type of American, and "blue state" implies a liberal region or a more liberal type of American. But the distinction between the two groups of states is hardly so simplistic. The analysis that suggests political, cultural, and demographic differences between the states is more accurate when applied to smaller geographical areas. Pennsylvania, for example, shows "red" characteristics in the Westsylvania interior, but "blue" characteristics around the urban centers of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Democratic political consultant James Carville has described Pennsylvania as "Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, with Alabama in between," suggesting that Pennsylvania, like several other blue states, would be solid Republican without its major cities, due to its remainder's religious and rural (thus socially conservative) nature.
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/47/Cartlinearlarge.png/200px-Cartlinearlarge.png)
Traditionally, the practice of designating a U.S. state as "red" or "blue" is based on the winner-take-all system employed for presidential elections by 48 of the 50 U.S. states (Nebraska and Maine being the exceptions), and the District of Columbia.
Despite the prevalent winner-take-all practice, the minority always gets a sizeable vote. Because of this, a third term has emerged, referring to these closely-divided states as purple states. Furthermore, it could be argued that all states are "purple" to varying degrees and that the "red vs. blue" division is far from an accurate description of US culture.
All states were consistent in voting for George W. Bush or his opponent in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections except for three: New Mexico (Gore in '00 and Bush in '04), Iowa (Gore in '00 and Bush in '04) and New Hampshire (Bush in '00 and Kerry in '04). The 2004 election showed two of these three states to be true to the presidential preferences of their respective regions, creating a greater regional separation; thus, an argument that the country is more divided from the 2000 election. All three of those states were very close in both elections.
Polarization
The division between red states and blue states has triggered a pronounced introspection among blue staters and red staters. Feelings of cultural and political polarization, which have gained increased media attention since the 2004 election, have led to increased mutual feelings of alienation and enmity. These attitudes have led to the often jocular suggestion that a red state-blue state secession is in order. The Jesusland map is one such joke, a satirical map that redraws the U.S.-Canada border to reflect this sociopolitical schism.
The polarization has been present for only two close elections (2000 and 2004). In the 1996 election, 31 U.S. states were "blue" and 19 "red" (though at the time the colors were not used consistently by the major networks). One thing that has been more consistent over this period is that the average "blue" state has a greater number of people and electoral votes than does the average "red" state. (When George W. Bush won 31 states in 2004, he gathered 286 electoral votes — an average of 9 electoral votes for each state won. When Bill Clinton won 31 states in 1996, he tallied 379 electoral votes — an average of 12 electoral votes per state carried.)
Viewing the nation as divided into two camps requires ignoring the largest single group of Americans: those who don't vote. In the 2000 election only about 54 percent of eligible voters were motivated enough to vote. In 2004, after the loudest, most-expensive get-out-the-vote campaigns by both ideological camps, the percentage who voted rose only a few points. Hence 2004 set an all-time national record with more than 80 million eligible voters taking a pass, far more than voted for either George W. Bush or John Kerry.
In fact, no Republican or Democratic nominee has attracted as much as 30 percent of eligible voters since Ronald Reagan in 1984.
Origins of current color scheme
Prior to the 2000 presidential election, there was no universally recognized color scheme to represent political parties in the USA. The practice of using colors to represent parties on electoral maps dates back at least as far as the 1950s, when such a format was employed within the Hammond series of historical atlases. [citation needed] Color-based schemes became more widespread with the adoption of color television in the 1960s and nearly ubiquitous with the advent of color in newspapers. A three-color scheme -- red, white and blue, the colors of the U.S. flag -- makes sense, and the third color, white, is useful in depicting maps showing states that are "undecided" in the polls and in election-night television coverage.
Early on, the most common—though again, not universal—color scheme was to use red for Democrats and blue for Republicans. This was the color scheme employed by NBC—David Brinkley famously referred to the 1984 map showing Reagan's 49-state landslide as a "sea of blue", but this color scheme was also employed by most newsmagazines. CBS during this same period, however, used the opposite scheme—blue for Democrats, red for Republicans. ABC was less consistent than its elder network brothers; in at least two presidential elections during this time before the emergence of cable news outlets, ABC used yellow for one major party and blue for the other. As late as 1996, there was still no universal association of one color with one party.[2] If anything, the majority of outlets in 1996 were using blue for the GOP and red for the Democrats. [citation needed]
But in 2000, for the first time, all major media outlets used the same colors for each party: Red for Republicans, blue for Democrats. Partly as a result of this first-time universal color-coding, the terms Red States and Blue States entered popular usage in the weeks following the 2000 presidential election. Additionally, the closeness of the disputed election kept the colored maps in the public view for longer than usual, and red and blue thus became fixed in the media and in many people's minds. [2] Journalists began to routinely refer to "blue states" and "red states" even before the 2000 election was settled. After the results were final, journalists stuck with the color scheme, such as The Atlantic's cover story by David Brooks in the December 2001 issue entitled, "One Nation, Slightly Divisible." Thus red and blue became fixed in the media and in many people's minds [3] despite the fact that no "official" color choices had been made by the parties.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee made use of the color scheme when it launched a national "Red to Blue Program" in 2006. [4] Otherwise the color scheme is unofficial and informal, but is widely recognized by media and commentators. Partisan supporters now often use the colors for promotional materials and campaign merchandise.
The choice of colors in this divide is counter-intuitive to many international observers, as throughout the world, red is commonly the designated color for parties representing labor, communist, and/or liberal interests [5] [6], which in the United States would be more closely correlated with the Democratic Party. Similarly, blue is used in these countries to depict conservative parties which in the case of the United States would be a color more suitable for the Republicans. For example, in Canada party colors are deeply ingrained and historic and have been unchanged during the Twentieth Century. The Liberal Party of Canada has long used red and the Conservative Party of Canada has long used blue, and in fact the phrases Liberal red and Tory blue are a part of the national lexicon, as is Red Tory, denoting Conservative members who are social moderates. Similarly, the symbol of Britain's Labour Party is a red rose (and the socialist song 'The Red Flag' is still sung at party conferences), while the British Conservatives are traditionally associated with the color blue.
Critiques
The paradigm has come under criticism on a number of fronts. Firstly, many argue that the usefulness of assigning partisanship to states is only really useful as it pertains to the Electoral College, a winner-take-all system of elections. The Republican and Democratic parties within a particular state may have a platform that departs from that of the national party, sometimes leading that state to favor one party in state and local elections and the other in Presidential elections. Arkansas and West Virginia were won by George W. Bush in 2004, but Democrats comprise the majority of officeholders in those states. New Hampshire and Maine both have two Republican senators but voted for John Kerry in the 2004 Presidential election.
Some conservatives have also been wary of using the red state term to describe conservative or Republican-voting electorates, as the term had previously most often been associated with socialist states, like Cuba, China, and East Germany. However, it may by argued that a color scheme associating red with the Democratic Party would have never become widely popularized since Democrats would have been just as reluctant to associate themselves with a color that has been historically perceived as associated with "un-American" communism.
However, a switch in colors would make more sense as far as historical political ideologies are concerned. Speaking with no political bias, the Democratic Party's predominately liberal view points that favor more government involvement in society, are closer to that of the eastern communist countries, and the Republican Party's predominately conservative view points are closer to that of the western capitalist countries during the cold war whom like today's conservative Republicans, wanted less government involvement in society.
See also
References
External links
- Maps and cartograms of the 2004 presidential election results, adjusting Red State/ Blue State maps for voting population rather than geographic area alone.
- City Ranks is a Google Maps mashup showing the correlation between population density and the Red State/Blue State phenomenon in an interactive map.
- One Nation, Slightly Divisible - David Brooks (subscription required)
- Washington Post series:
- Federal Review Composite Poll - 2004 Electoral College Projection
- Washington Post "Elephants Are Red, Donkeys Are Blue"
- "One Fate, Two Fates, Red States, Blue States"
- CNN "Learn the signs of your political colors" from September 2001
- Election maps from December, 2000
- Choosing colors based on incumbent vs. challenger victory from November, 2004
- BlueStatesRedStates.com A Purple site for Red & Blue times
- The Honky Tonk Gap: Country Music, Red State Identity, and the Election of 2004