Purple America, Purple South
There's now a "purple map" (see below) of the 2006 mid-term elections, and unsurprisingly, it reveals again that most regions of the country weren't a romp for either side -- and very few places, if any, can be honestly written off as purely "red" or "blue."
Note in particular the battleground of the South. There are the strong "red" or Republican patches running through such areas as northern Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia; the Georgia and north Florida coast; and southeast Kentucky.
But even more striking are the deep shades of blue, such as most of Arkansas and Tennessee; a belt slashing through the piedmont of Georgia, South Carolin and North Carolina (the South's fastest-growing area); and Appalachian counties in the Virginias.
The concentrations of red in the South are on par with the swaths of scarlet one sees in the Midwest/Plains (Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma) and the upper West.
It's amazing to see so many blogs in the Democratic Party camp writing off the South in an attempt to position themselves as "realistic," when the reality of fierce party competition in the South couldn't be more clear.


5 Comments:
What's the source of the green in Mississippi?
You have an interesting argument, but if you rescaled the size of each county to factor in total population, would you be able to draw the same conclusion?
With a few exceptions, the blue areas in the South are counties with majority black populations. Southern whites vote overwhelmingly for right wing Republicans such as Bush, Lott, Sessions, etc. Democrats cannot win that group. Despite the islands of blue due to black voters the South is majority red. If anything this map demonstrates the continued racial divide that characterizes the South. Souther whites view the Democrats as the party of the blacks, period.
Quoth Anonymous II:
"Southern whites vote overwhelmingly for right wing Republicans such as Bush, Lott, Sessions, etc. Democrats cannot win that group."
Self-fulfilling prophesy much?
The south should be ashamed.
Post a Comment
Return to Facing South's main page