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Michael Barone
Michael Barone
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The GOP Should Go Upscale

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There's a debate going on in some Republican circles over which groups of the electorate the party should target.

This debate starts off with some uncomfortable realizations. One is that while John McCain's 46 percent share of the vote is not as dismal as some losing candidates of the past, it is still far short of a majority and does not look to be easily expanded. Yes, McCain showed strength in Jacksonian America, along the Appalachian chain and west to Arkansas and Oklahoma. And he ran well with whites in the Deep South. But these are not growing demographics.

A second uncomfortable realization is that McCain ran dismally among blacks (losing 95 percent to 4 percent, according to the Edison-Mitofsky exit poll) and voters under 30 (losing 66 percent to 32 percent). The good news for Republicans is that there's not much room for Democrats to grow among black voters. The bad news is that voters who were under 30 in 2008 are going to be a larger and larger share of the electorate. To get a glimpse of the future, consider that McCain carried young voters in only nine states with 57 electoral votes. And in only five of those states, with 22 electoral votes, did he win more than 55 percent of the young.

A final uncomfortable realization is that the affluent suburbs have, outside the South and even in parts of the South — North Carolina's Research Triangle, metro Orlando — become Democratic. Nationally, McCain ran even with Barack Obama among voters with incomes over $50,000 and over $100,000. He actually ran behind among voters with incomes over $200,000. Obama carried narrowly those with college degrees and ran far ahead among those with graduate degrees.

The debate among Republicans is whether to go after downscale or upscale voters. Those who argue for going downscale usually have a 2012 candidate in mind: Sarah Palin. She has an undoubted appeal to such voters and revved up part of the Republican base — cultural conservatives, and rural and small-town voters — throughout the campaign. Despite the scorn the media heaped on her, she has excellent political instincts and seems capable of developing the knowledge base that would make her a credible presidential candidate in the future.

But my examination of the exit poll results and county-by-county election returns has led me to conclude tentatively that going upscale is the right move.

As David Frum has pointed out, we're going to have more well-educated and millennial-generation voters in the future and fewer less-educated and Baby Boomers (among whom McCain ran even).

There are some immediate targets. Among all voters, Democratic House candidates won higher percentages than Obama. But voters at the low end of the age spectrum and the high end of the income and education spectrums cast higher percentages for Obama than House Democrats. They are, at the moment, Obama Republicans, hopeful that Obama can forge the bipartisan coalitions he has promised and eager for the change they think he represents. But that's not the change that congressional Democrats have produced, at least so far.

They passed their pork-laden stimulus package in the House without a single Republican vote. This positions Republican candidates to say, more in sorrow than in anger, that congressional Democrats are preventing our president from governing as he wants to. We want to help.

Going upscale also means downplaying the cultural issues that were an important reason for Republican victories from 1980 to 2004. Here, young voters are critical, and their attitudes give guidance. They oppose criminalization of abortion, but they also disfavor it — the position of the great middle of the electorate. They tend to favor same-sex marriage — the days of winning votes by opposing it are nearing an end. And while they seem blithely confident that government action can solve problems like health care, they are also a generation that insists on choice in their personal lives. Members of the iPod generation don't wait for their elders to tell them what the top 40 songs are. They make their own playlists.

There's a tension here, which Republicans can exploit, between the tactics of the MyObama campaign and the policies he favors that would limit choices — one-size-fits-all government health insurance, the effective abolition of secret ballot unionization elections, and environmental policies that reduce your choice of cars and increase the price of energy.

Republicans can argue that their policies will let you choose your future. No, I don't have a candidate in mind, and I don't think Republicans can abandon cultural conservatives altogether. But upscale seems to me to be the way to go.

To read more political analysis by Michael Barone, visit www.usnews.com/baroneblog. To find out more about Michael Barone, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.

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Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Sir;.... If you want the republicans to be successful, you should dream on... They have reached the limits of their power, and the libertarians represent a big split of the republicans... While the libertarians are republicans in name only, it is the core of the republicans, the religious nut cakes who will never willingly support the notion of individual freedom as given voice by the libertarians... It does not mean they will not vote together, but they will not be more than allies.... There are other severe differences between the republicans and republicanism.... You will see that money bets on a sure thing while the religious are motivated by ideology...  The fact is that ideology which is anti rational at its core is an impediment to effective government...Now; effective government is not what the rich want, unless as now, everything is on the rocks, and then the rich look for the people to save them... The philosophy of government is fundamentally different between the republican core, and everyone else in this society... People guided by faith, with a feeling of moral superiority are not given to horse trading...  You see they are contented with the worst government if it gives lip service to evengelical goals...We cannot bear it; and while we tolerate their government, clearly they will not coooperate at all with democratic govenment...Some one should ask if these people can give the pledge of allegiance.... If they cannot they should govern themselves; but not be allowed to govern the nation... They will not be bound to us or to laws made by democratic government... They expect us to be bound to their laws...It is a fundamental division between us and them, and between them and reality... They should be marginalized... They should be denied power... They are powerful in small conservative communities and in the South... They can do no better than rule where ignorance reigns...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sun Feb 1, 2009 11:48 AM
I draw your attention to that old, priceless Larson cartoon. A dinosaur was addressing a convention of those of his ilk. He said, and I paraphrase, "My fellow dinosaurs, we are really in a bind. The Ice Age is coming, the mammals are taking over the Earth, and we all have brains the size of a pea."

Time to morph, Barone. And it's too bad you mess around so much with those who don't believe in evolution, because you could sure use it right now.

Find a solution, Barone. Act like an adult in the face of conditions that threaten the very survival of your grandkids. Stop reaching like a junkie for the same old superstition that eats away at our strength as a species capable of reason.

To my friend James Sweeney: Your words to James Buchanan the other day will stick with me forever: "Consider that the situation is only inevitable. We have only one earth, and many nations.. Such fractious solutions will be our future, infinitely...."

The only inevitability is that we survive if we rise to the occasion. Otherwise, time to turn our hopes to another planet.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Sun Feb 1, 2009 7:51 PM
Oops. Sorry about that. I meant Pat Buchanan.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Masako
Sun Feb 1, 2009 8:00 PM
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