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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(129,828 posts)
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 03:49 PM Tuesday

GOP may have a problem with working-class voters

By Ronald Brownstein / Bloomberg Opinion

In the 2024 election, Donald Trump mapped an escape route for Republicans from the greatest long-term challenge facing the party. Less than a year later, that path looks much more precarious.

The core demographic challenge facing the GOP is that the party’s most reliable bloc of voters — white people without a four-year college degree — is shrinking. Trump’s solution in 2024 was to markedly improve his performance among non-white voters without a four-year college degree. But polling through his second term consistently shows those voters cooling on his performance and priorities. If that trend continues, the math for Republican candidates — especially in presidential races — will grow much more complicated.

For decades, white voters without a college degree were the nucleus of the dominant New Deal coalition forged for Democrats by Franklin D. Roosevelt. But the cultural and racial storms of the 1960s shattered that coalition; during the presidencies of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, millions of blue-collar white voters moved right, largely around racially tinged issues such as school busing, crime and welfare, but also because of social issues, taxes and national security. Democrats have struggled with those voters ever since, but Trump widened the GOP advantage to a commanding level not seen since the “Reagan Democrats” era in the 1980s. The major data sources on how Americans vote — including exit polls, the AP/VoteCast survey and the Pew Research Center’s Validated Voters study — agree that Trump carried nearly two-thirds of white voters without a college degree in each of his three campaigns.

But although working-class white people remain the largest single bloc of voters, their presence in the electorate has steadily declined as the U.S. has grown both more racially diverse and better educated. In 1980, white people without a four-year degree comprised 68 percent of voters, according to an analysis of Census data provided exclusively to me by William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Metro think tank. By 2008, Frey calculates, their share had fallen below half, to 48 percent, for the first time. Though Trump inspired very high turnout among these blue-collar white people, that hasn’t overcome their continued decline in the overall population: Their share of the total vote fell from 42 percent in 2016 to slightly over 37 percent in 2024, the Census reported. Blue-collar White voters remain a bigger share of the electorate in the pivotal Rustbelt swing states, but even there they have already fallen below a majority in Pennsylvania and are likely to do so in Michigan in 2028.

https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/comment-gop-may-have-a-problem-with-working-class-voters/

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GOP may have a problem with working-class voters (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Tuesday OP
Now, imagine the numbers a year from now Fiendish Thingy Tuesday #1
I'm not really that optimistic about hard-core Trumpsters hopping the fence. Aristus Wednesday #4
2018 results say otherwise Fiendish Thingy Wednesday #5
"...as the U.S. has grown both more racially diverse and better educated" DBoon Tuesday #2
all working folk should have a problem with the fucking GOP Skittles Tuesday #3

Fiendish Thingy

(21,041 posts)
1. Now, imagine the numbers a year from now
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 04:12 PM
Tuesday

When the economy will be in recession, with double digit inflation, and millions who have lost their healthcare or see their premiums double.

Trump could end up being the “Great Unifier”, bringing together suffering Americans from all races and parties in opposition to his corrupt, destructive fascism.

If it gets bad enough, no amount of anti-immigrant hatred or Antifa-panic will be able to counter the real life suffering of millions struggling to put food on the table, keep a roof over their heads and stay healthy.

Even the desperate gerrymandering gambit isn’t likely to save them - if California’s prop 50 passes, republicans will net a max of 7-8 new seats, which means Dems only have to flip 9-10 seats to regain the majority.

Current projections are for a 20-30 seat pickup for Dems; imagine what those numbers will be a year from now.

Aristus

(71,107 posts)
4. I'm not really that optimistic about hard-core Trumpsters hopping the fence.
Wed Oct 15, 2025, 08:31 AM
Wednesday

Remember, for the Trumpanzees, it’s not about issues, it’s about identity. They see themselves as the Trump Army. It’s everything to them. It’s all they have. Their squalid, pathetic lives would be nothing without their devotion to him.

It’s not that surprising to imagine them dying for him. (No great loss, and the sooner, the better).

But they won’t vote for Dems, or stay home on Election Day. Trump is the greatest thing that ever happened to them.

Fiendish Thingy

(21,041 posts)
5. 2018 results say otherwise
Wed Oct 15, 2025, 09:17 AM
Wednesday

Dems picked up 40 seats, in part because Trump wasn’t on the ballot and significant segments of the MAGA faithful didn’t vote compared to 2016 and 2020.

In 2026, the US will be in a recession, probably with double digit inflation, and millions without healthcare or premiums that have doubled.

Im not suggesting there will be a mass abandonment of the MAGA movement by the 15-20% of republican voters who are die hard MAGA, but the crumbling economy will have a significant impact on voter behaviour.

The economy will definitely change the electoral landscape- both in flipping Biden 2020/Trump 2024 voters back to Dems (many already voted for Trump but voted for Dems downballot) as well as increasing turnout among young voters and those 2020 voters who stayed home in 2024.

Dems are already running 4 points ahead of republicans in generic ballot polls- just wait until there is a recession and sane Dems are nominated to run against the MAGA loons - even MTG gets it.

DBoon

(24,380 posts)
2. "...as the U.S. has grown both more racially diverse and better educated"
Tue Oct 14, 2025, 04:48 PM
Tuesday

Ever wonder why Trump is both trying to destroy higher educated and is conducting pogroms against immigrants?

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