Oklahoma's Democratic trend (user search)
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  Oklahoma's Democratic trend (search mode)
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Author Topic: Oklahoma's Democratic trend  (Read 2136 times)
VPH
vivaportugalhabs
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« on: May 12, 2015, 11:50:51 AM »

Oklahoma really should be a lot more competitive than it is, but that doesn't mean it will be.

Why's that?  The OKC suburbs might be the most traditionally Republican parts of the state, and they're growing.

Except that it's no longer 1980, and suburban growth doesn't automatically equal Republican trends. If anything, it would inevitably indicate the opposite, as suburban growth is almost always fueled by outsiders. Newcomers to suburban areas do not take on the culture, politics and mindset of the natives; they demolish it.

Ask just about any long-term resident of a rural-turned-suburban Southern county why their community went from being largely Democratic in the 1960s and 1970s, to heavily Republican in the 1980s and 1990s, and again started trending back Democratic beginning in the 2000s.
How many Suburban Southern counties are trending Dem? And the ones that are usually do because of growing minority population, which I don't see as a huge thing in OKC or Tulsa's 'burbs.
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