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America’s polarised citizenry took a break from intense partisan bickering to produce the highest off-year turnout in a midterm election in 50 years on 6 November. Is it possible that all that effort actually nudged us forward a bit?
Because the votes were counted so slowly across the country, we were also slow to realise that Democrats had won the national congressional vote by a margin greater than that of the Tea Party Republicans in 2010. In fact, Democrats overcame huge structural hurdles to win nearly 40 seats.
At first, the results looked like something of a stalemate. The Republican Party retained and even strengthened its hold on the Senate. President Trump’s approval rating was at 45 per cent, one percentage point below his percentage of the popular vote in the 2016 election. Analysts said that Mr. Trump still knew how to get Republicans 'excited, interested and turn them out' and that he had 'deepened his hold on rural areas.'
In the days that followed, though, it became clear that Democrats had made substantial gains. Analysts I trusted concluded that this was because suburban and college-educated women issued 'a sharp rebuke to President Trump' that set off a 'blue wave through the urban and suburban House districts.' At first, I also believed that was the main story line.
But the 2018 election was much bigger than that. It was transformative, knocking down what we assumed were Electoral College certainties. We didn’t immediately see this transformation because we assumed that Mr. Trump and the polarisation in his wake still governed as before.
White women's rebellion
First of all, Democrats did not win simply because white women with college degrees rebelled against Mr Trump’s misogyny, sexism and disrespect for women. Nearly every category of women rebelled.
These conclusions are based on Democracy Corps’ election night survey for Women’s Voice Women’s Vote Action Fund and a study of the exit polls conducted for Edison and Catalyst.
Yes, House Democrats increased their vote margin nationally among white women with at least a four-year degree by 13 points compared with the Clinton-Trump margin in 2016. But Democrats also won 71 per cent of millennial women and 54 per cent of unmarried white women (who split their votes two years earlier). In 2018, unmarried white women pushed up their vote margin for Democrats by 10 points. In fact, white women without a four-year degree (pollster shorthand for the white working class) raised their vote margin for Democrats by 13 points.
Democrats made big gains because Mr Trump declared war on immigrants — and on multicultural America — and lost.
Overall, white women split their vote between Democrats and Republicans, but it is clear which way they are moving. Interestingly, the white college women who were supposed to be the 'fuel for this Democratic wave' played a smaller role in the Democrats’ increased 2018 margin than white working class women, because the former were 15 per cent of midterm voters and the latter 25 per cent.
Will this shift of white women be durable? Mr Trump is the leader of the Republican Party as it heads toward 2020. Like Mr Trump, Senate and House Republicans were animated about white males being victimized by the PC police. The new Republican House caucus is 90 per cent white men; nearly half of the new Democratic members will be women.
Second, Mr Trump and his party maintained their principal base with white working class voters, the shift among women notwithstanding, and Democrats still need to do better. Nonetheless, Democrats got their wave in part because a significant portion of male and female white working class voters abandoned Mr Trump and his Republican allies.
In 2016, the white working class men that Mr Trump spoke most forcefully to as the 'forgotten Americans' gave him 71 per cent of their votes and gave only 23 per cent to Hillary Clinton. This year, the Republicans won their votes with a still-impressive margin of 66 to 32 per cent. But what was essentially a three-to-one margin was deflated to two-to-one, which affected a lot of races.
Trump's lost war on multicultural America
Working people are not fools, and Mr Trump promised them a Republican president who would never cut Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid; who would repeal Obamacare but provide 'insurance for everybody'; who would get rid of bad trade deals and 'drain the swamp,' as he never tired of saying. Instead, had Mr Trump’s effort to replace Obamacare passed, it would have imposed vast cuts in retirement programs and driven up health insurance costs. His tax reforms were heavily weighted to large corporations and the top 1 per cent. So it is no surprise that more than half of white working class men now believe that Mr Trump is 'self-dealing' and corrupt.
The Democratic Senate candidates in Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio and Pennsylvania called out the president on these issues and won by more than double digits.
There is a long way to go, but 10 per cent of 2016 Trump voters supported Democrats this year, and 40 per cent of moderate Republicans either voted Democratic or stayed home. For Mr Trump, this setback will be corrosive, unless he decides to acknowledge the 'shellacking' and starts to actually 'drain the swamp.' Don’t hold your breath.
Third, Democrats made big gains because Mr Trump declared war on immigrants — and on multicultural America — and lost. His ugly campaign succeeded in making immigration and the border a voting issue for the Republican base, according to the postelection survey I did with Democracy Corps, which asked those voting Republican why they did. 'Open borders' was the top reason given for voting against a Democratic candidate. But it backfired among other voters.
I thought it would take Mr. Trump’s defeat in 2020 for America to be liberated from this suffocating polarisation, but it may have already begun.
On Election Day, a stunning 54 per cent of those who voted said immigrants 'strengthen our country.' Mr Trump’s party lost the national popular vote by seven points, but he lost the debate over whether immigrants are a strength or a burden by 20 points. Mr. Trump got more than half of Republicans to believe immigrants were a burden, but three quarters of Democrats and a large majority of independents concluded that America gains from immigration.
For their part, the Democrats embraced their diversity. They supported comprehensive immigration reform and the Dreamers, opposed Mr Trump’s border wall and opposed the separation of children from their families. They nominated African-American candidates for governor in Georgia and Florida and fought the suppression of minority voters. When it was over, the Democrats got more votes and created a new House majority that is nearly half women, and a third people of color. It also has more LBGTQ members than ever before.
In short, the Republicans lost badly in the House by running as an anti-immigrant party, while the Democrats made major gains as a self-confident multicultural party.
Winning the heart of rural America
Fourth, Democrats could not have picked up as many House seats as they did in 2018 without raising their share of the vote by four points in the suburbs, which have grown to encompass 50 per cent of voters. Mrs Clinton won many of these districts in 2016, so it was clear that any further shift in the Democrats’ direction would prove consequential. But Democrats made their biggest gains not there, but in the rural parts of the country. That was the shocker.
Democrats cut the Republicans’ margin in rural areas by 13 points, according to the Edison exit poll and by seven points in one by Catalist. Democrats still lost rural America by somewhere between 14 and 18 points so that left Democrats in a pickle there. That had implications for the Senate, but it shouldn’t conceal the fact that Democrats actually made progress in rural areas.
In the senate races, Mr Trump looked like a giant killer because he took out at least three incumbent Democrats. But he mainly campaigned in states that he won by large margins in 2016.
The Democratic wave exposed Mr Trump’s vulnerability and suggests a less polarised country. In the face of his divisive campaign, parts of rural and working class America peeled off.
I thought it would take Mr. Trump’s defeat in 2020 for America to be liberated from this suffocating polarisation, but it may have already begun.
(c) New York Times