Why did North Carolina trend D? (user search)
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  Why did North Carolina trend D? (search mode)
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Author Topic: Why did North Carolina trend D?  (Read 2103 times)
Arbitrage1980
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Posts: 770
« on: November 18, 2019, 05:50:09 PM »

Simple, the stat usually votes about 6 points rightwards of VA and 5 points left of Georgia.

The real question is why when VA and GA moved 2 points left that NC didn't follow. The trend here makes more sense than dat swing.

I’m not surprised NC swung right.  I’m somewhat surprised it trended left, but not too much.

Compared to GA and VA, NC seems a bit more more WWC, if that’s the correct term.  GA is blacker, both VA and GA are richer and less rural.

NC is now a purple state due to the influx of white liberals from the northeast who move to NC for lower taxes and cost of living but still vote for awful Democratic policies. Mecklenburg and Wake counties are example of this (VA has this dynamic on steroids).

The reason Trump won NC by nearly 4% was because rural and exurban areas make up a high % of the state's population.
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Arbitrage1980
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 770
« Reply #1 on: November 18, 2019, 10:01:38 PM »

Simple, the stat usually votes about 6 points rightwards of VA and 5 points left of Georgia.

The real question is why when VA and GA moved 2 points left that NC didn't follow. The trend here makes more sense than dat swing.

I’m not surprised NC swung right.  I’m somewhat surprised it trended left, but not too much.

Compared to GA and VA, NC seems a bit more more WWC, if that’s the correct term.  GA is blacker, both VA and GA are richer and less rural.

The other big difference is that most transplants to NC are now more similar to those moving to South Carolina and Florida than those moving to Virginia and Georgia.  Exit polling showed that recent transplants to North Carolina voted more like native North Carolinians than the previous "generation" of transplants.

Interesting. Is there data behind this? I thought that northern transplants to NC were liberal, as they are the college educated professionas working in Charlotte and Research Triangle.

SC and FL attract conservative retired people. And the west side of Florida has ot of conservative/moderate Midwestern white transplants.

GA is shocking and worrisome. The suburban Atlanta counties of Cobb and Gwinnett have gone from 90% to around 45% white in just a generation, resulting in Hillary winning both counties (first Dem to win them since Carter 1976). And Abrams outperformed Hillary in the governor race. With both Senate seats in the state up next year, I'm definitely sweating GA.
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