For all the hubbub about the gender gap, the marriage gap more than doubles it:http://elections.msnbc.msn.com/ns/politics/2012/all/president/#exitPollMarriage GapMarried Men: 60-38 for RomneyMarried Women: 53-46 for RomneyUnmarried Men: 56-40 for ObamaUnmarried Women: 67-31 for ObamaOverall Married: 60-40 for RomneyGender GapMen: 52-45 RomneyWomen: 55-44 ObamaI found this interesting.
11/7/2012 1:56:13 PM
For men, having children makes you more likely to vote for Romney.But for women, having children makes them more likely to vote for Obama.Also, the race distinction is stunning:Category Obama Romney % TotalWhite 39 59 72Black 93 6 13Hispanic or Latino 71 27 10Asian 73 26 3Other 58 38 2I find it really problematic that we have entire ethnic groups that will vote >90% for a candidate. I would blame the GOP for this, not black people. But either way, it points to a sharp divide, the kind of divide that can become dangerous.Romney's support never goes that deep either. Even if you narrow it down to white protestants you're not topping 80%. The higher percents are just trivial statements. If you disapprove of the president's job of course you're voting for the other guy.
11/7/2012 2:44:14 PM
11/7/2012 2:49:21 PM
Yeah, I wanted to mention the racial stuff, but didn't want to muddy the waters.I would have never guessed that if you only look at white votes, Obama would have lost:CA, IL, PA, OH, MI, and even NJ and MD.Honestly, looking at this data, I have no idea how Mitt Romney wasn't the last, best hope for any Republican to win the White House. Unless there is major structural change in the Republican Party, that is.Every election cycle, Dems inherently gain a point or two based on changes in racial composition of the electorate. Throw in a decline and/or delay in marriage and children among whites, and the Rep. picture doesn't look very happy.
11/7/2012 2:50:52 PM
When one party built its base and power by turning poor whites against poor blacks, what do you expect to happen a few decades later?
11/7/2012 2:56:10 PM
11/7/2012 2:58:51 PM
This might be related to age (not sure if that was mentioned). Younger people vote more heavily Democrat, and younger people are less likely to be married. That doesn't account for all of this, but I'm sure its a factor.
11/7/2012 3:26:14 PM
^Same goes with race - whites are more likely to be married. But the gap is sustained even within racial groups, just not quite to the same extent.
11/7/2012 3:30:09 PM
^, ^^ I think these cross-correlations are pointless without a fundamental mechanism behind it. If you look at religion, you get a considerably greater clumping for Romney, and this has an obvious connection to marriage.I would suggest as a 2nd mechanism home-ownership and development patterns. Marriage is often the starting point for moving into a house and finding a more permanent development to live in. This almost always leads to living in a town with a lower population. The degree of urban vs. rural shows a correlation almost as large as religiosity.From anecdotal experience, I would venture a guess that it's (lifestyle choice) --- implies ---> (political preference), versus the other way around. Many people (more than enough to explain this difference) who live "The American Dream" and vote conservative had previous days of youthful indiscretion when they lived in a larger city and still learned new things.Strangely, it's the suburban lifestyle that's one of the most dependent on handouts from the government. You have the mortgage deductions to start with, and then an entire smorgasbord when we start talking about children.[Edited on November 7, 2012 at 3:56 PM. Reason : ]
11/7/2012 3:55:58 PM
11/7/2012 11:27:38 PM