Discuss with maps!: County map requests for 2008 election results
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  Discuss with maps!: County map requests for 2008 election results
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Author Topic: Discuss with maps!: County map requests for 2008 election results  (Read 101804 times)
Vepres
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #200 on: July 16, 2010, 10:17:47 PM »

Here's Broomfield County:



The gray precinct is a tie. McCain got one vote, Obama got two, and Frank McEnulty, the New American Independent Party candidate (who received ~800 votes nation-wide) tied Obama with two votes!
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Vepres
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #201 on: July 16, 2010, 10:56:12 PM »

Here they are together:

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minionofmidas
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« Reply #202 on: July 17, 2010, 04:44:42 AM »

Here's Broomfield County:



The gray precinct is a tie. McCain got one vote, Obama got two, and Frank McEnulty, the New American Independent Party candidate (who received ~800 votes nation-wide) tied Obama with two votes!
Lol. Broomfield swung hugely IIRC.
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Vepres
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #203 on: July 17, 2010, 11:49:46 AM »

Here's Broomfield County:



The gray precinct is a tie. McCain got one vote, Obama got two, and Frank McEnulty, the New American Independent Party candidate (who received ~800 votes nation-wide) tied Obama with two votes!
Lol. Broomfield swung hugely IIRC.

Yeah, it had a >5% swing in 2008.
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Sbane
sbane
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« Reply #204 on: July 17, 2010, 03:13:12 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?
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Vepres
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #205 on: July 17, 2010, 03:44:21 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?

Affluent, but also very socially liberal and generally agree with Democrats on foreign policy. The culture war stuff really turns them off too.
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Sbane
sbane
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« Reply #206 on: July 17, 2010, 05:58:48 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?

Affluent, but also very socially liberal and generally agree with Democrats on foreign policy. The culture war stuff really turns them off too.

But they seem to vote differently from other Denver suburbs. Are they much more socially liberal due to their proximity to Boulder? IIRC the gay marriage ban passed in all of the Denver suburban counties, except for Boulder obviously.
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Vepres
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #207 on: July 17, 2010, 10:48:17 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?

Affluent, but also very socially liberal and generally agree with Democrats on foreign policy. The culture war stuff really turns them off too.

But they seem to vote differently from other Denver suburbs. Are they much more socially liberal due to their proximity to Boulder? IIRC the gay marriage ban passed in all of the Denver suburban counties, except for Boulder obviously.

Generally, they are more Boulder suburbs than Denver suburbs, at least from a political perspective. Very socially liberal. Their employment is largely in IT. Well-educated white professionals, a group that trended strongly towards Obama.

Additionally, non-management IT employees tend to be young, as large corporations prefer people who recent received a college degree (they are always looking for people with "3-5 years of experience").
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Sbane
sbane
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« Reply #208 on: July 17, 2010, 11:17:35 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?

Affluent, but also very socially liberal and generally agree with Democrats on foreign policy. The culture war stuff really turns them off too.

But they seem to vote differently from other Denver suburbs. Are they much more socially liberal due to their proximity to Boulder? IIRC the gay marriage ban passed in all of the Denver suburban counties, except for Boulder obviously.
Their employment is largely in IT. Well-educated white professionals, a group that trended strongly towards Obama.


That's very interesting. The IT boom has also made the bay area more liberal, imo. Are the IT companies mostly located towards Boulder? I am just trying to figure out why the southern part of the Denver metro seems so much more Republican. Is it because that area is wealthier?
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Vepres
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #209 on: July 18, 2010, 09:58:50 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?

Affluent, but also very socially liberal and generally agree with Democrats on foreign policy. The culture war stuff really turns them off too.

But they seem to vote differently from other Denver suburbs. Are they much more socially liberal due to their proximity to Boulder? IIRC the gay marriage ban passed in all of the Denver suburban counties, except for Boulder obviously.
Their employment is largely in IT. Well-educated white professionals, a group that trended strongly towards Obama.


That's very interesting. The IT boom has also made the bay area more liberal, imo. Are the IT companies mostly located towards Boulder? I am just trying to figure out why the southern part of the Denver metro seems so much more Republican. Is it because that area is wealthier?

Yeah, generally that's where the rich live. Douglas county has fourth highest median household income of all US counties, between $90k and $100k in 2007 estimates.

Additionally, there aren't very many Hispanics or blacks compared to Denver and Aurora.
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All Along The Watchtower
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« Reply #210 on: July 19, 2010, 01:20:44 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?

Affluent, but also very socially liberal and generally agree with Democrats on foreign policy. The culture war stuff really turns them off too.

But they seem to vote differently from other Denver suburbs. Are they much more socially liberal due to their proximity to Boulder? IIRC the gay marriage ban passed in all of the Denver suburban counties, except for Boulder obviously.
Their employment is largely in IT. Well-educated white professionals, a group that trended strongly towards Obama.


That's very interesting. The IT boom has also made the bay area more liberal, imo. Are the IT companies mostly located towards Boulder? I am just trying to figure out why the southern part of the Denver metro seems so much more Republican. Is it because that area is wealthier?

Yeah, generally that's where the rich live. Douglas county has fourth highest median household income of all US counties, between $90k and $100k in 2007 estimates.

Additionally, there aren't very many Hispanics or blacks compared to Denver and Aurora.

Isn't there also a strong evangelical Christian presence in the southern Denver suburbs?
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All Along The Watchtower
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« Reply #211 on: July 19, 2010, 01:23:23 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?

Affluent, but also very socially liberal and generally agree with Democrats on foreign policy. The culture war stuff really turns them off too.

But they seem to vote differently from other Denver suburbs. Are they much more socially liberal due to their proximity to Boulder? IIRC the gay marriage ban passed in all of the Denver suburban counties, except for Boulder obviously.
Their employment is largely in IT. Well-educated white professionals, a group that trended strongly towards Obama.


That's very interesting. The IT boom has also made the bay area more liberal, imo. Are the IT companies mostly located towards Boulder? I am just trying to figure out why the southern part of the Denver metro seems so much more Republican. Is it because that area is wealthier?

What's interesting about the IT boom is that many of the large IT companies were (some still are) lead by Republicans who voted for Republicans up until 1992. The anti-intellectual and heavily religious streak of the Contract for America Republicans, plus H.W. Bush's failed economic policies, drew them away from the GOP.
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Fuzzybigfoot
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« Reply #212 on: July 24, 2010, 12:45:16 AM »

Oklahoma county would be cool.  Cheesy

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Vepres
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #213 on: July 26, 2010, 10:38:51 PM »

Why are those places in the southeast part of Boulder county, which seem to be affluent suburbs, so Democratic? Was there a huge swing there in 2008?

Affluent, but also very socially liberal and generally agree with Democrats on foreign policy. The culture war stuff really turns them off too.

But they seem to vote differently from other Denver suburbs. Are they much more socially liberal due to their proximity to Boulder? IIRC the gay marriage ban passed in all of the Denver suburban counties, except for Boulder obviously.
Their employment is largely in IT. Well-educated white professionals, a group that trended strongly towards Obama.


That's very interesting. The IT boom has also made the bay area more liberal, imo. Are the IT companies mostly located towards Boulder? I am just trying to figure out why the southern part of the Denver metro seems so much more Republican. Is it because that area is wealthier?

Yeah, generally that's where the rich live. Douglas county has fourth highest median household income of all US counties, between $90k and $100k in 2007 estimates.

Additionally, there aren't very many Hispanics or blacks compared to Denver and Aurora.

Isn't there also a strong evangelical Christian presence in the southern Denver suburbs?

I don't think so. Colorado is one of the least religious states, and given the conservatism of Colorado Springs and the eastern plains, the Denver area must be relatively un-religious compared to even the rest of the state.

I'm certain that evangelicals don't have much of a presence, though I can't say about other sects.
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