Flashback: Obama’s Plans for 2012 Campaign Won’t Include the White Working Class

Post racial.

From a November, 2011 article by Thomas Edsall.

For decades, Democrats have suffered continuous and increasingly severe losses among white voters. But preparations by Democratic operatives for the 2012 election make it clear for the first time that the party will explicitly abandon the white working class.

All pretense of trying to win a majority of the white working class has been effectively jettisoned in favor of cementing a center-left coalition made up, on the one hand, of voters who have gotten ahead on the basis of educational attainment — professors, artists, designers, editors, human resources managers, lawyers, librarians, social workers, teachers and therapists — and a second, substantial constituency of lower-income voters who are disproportionately African-American and Hispanic.

It is instructive to trace the evolution of a political strategy based on securing this coalition in the writings and comments, over time, of such Democratic analysts as Stanley Greenberg and Ruy Teixeira. Both men were initially determined to win back the white working-class majority, but both currently advocate a revised Democratic alliance in which whites without college degrees are effectively replaced by well-educated socially liberal whites in alliance with the growing ranks of less affluent minority voters, especially Hispanics.

The 2012 approach treats white voters without college degrees as an unattainable cohort. The Democratic goal with these voters is to keep Republican winning margins to manageable levels, in the 12 to 15 percent range, as opposed to the 30-point margin of 2010 — a level at which even solid wins among minorities and other constituencies are not enough to produce Democratic victories.

“It’s certainly true that if you compare how things were in the early ’90s to the way they are now, there has been a significant shift in the role of the working class. You see it across all advanced industrial countries,” Teixeira, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, said in an interview.

In the United States, Teixeira noted, “the Republican Party has become the party of the white working class,” while in Europe, many working-class voters who had been the core of Social Democratic parties have moved over to far right parties, especially those with anti-immigration platforms.

Teixeira, writing with John Halpin, argues in “The Path to 270: Demographics versus Economics in the 2012 Presidential Election,” that in order to be re-elected, President Obama must keep his losses among white college graduates to the 4-point margin of 2008 (47-51). Why? Otherwise he will not be able to survive a repetition of 2010, when white working-class voters supported Republican House candidates by a record-setting margin of 63-33.

There’s a reason why Mitt Romney mentioned the 47% of government dependents. They’re a large part of Obama’s voting bloc.

Indeed, the 2012 campaign has seen its fair share of racial exploitation and venom against white voters .   Preaching to the Black Caucus to “guard the change”, the SEIU telling blacks they’re easily manipulated, Obama’s selective use of ‘black dialect’, voting pigment over substance, calling Tea party patriots and anti- Obama voters “racist”.

Sorry all you union working class white people.  You “bitter, gun-clinging, religious” people. You’ve been kicked to the curb.  How does it feel to be a democrat pawn?

 

 

Related posts:

http://sfcmac.wordpress.com/2012/10/16/the-dem-race-baiting-strategy-summarized/

http://sfcmac.wordpress.com/2012/02/27/so-much-for-post-racialism-part-ii-obamas-race-based-campaign/

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