The legislature is usually Democrat.The Governor has only been a Republican twice.There are 2,434,401 registered Democrats and 1,737,459 registered Republicans (as of 2003)Why does NC always vote Republican for president?
2/19/2008 8:34:39 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_strategy
2/19/2008 8:36:21 PM
Because the south wanted blacks to register to vote by guessing the number of jellybeans in a jar. Yankee democrats thought differently.
2/19/2008 8:39:51 PM
did you read the first post or just dig up some obscure historical fact that has no significance?
2/19/2008 8:43:26 PM
2/19/2008 9:06:18 PM
because a large part of NC population is a. reactionary christian evangelicals who want the [insert christian pandering candidate] & Jesus 08' ticketb. are the git-er-dun type of working class american who gets pissed at illegals taking their jobs and paying welfare and actually think the higher up GOP candidates give a damn about their pathetic lives in the trailor parkc. are more of the libertarian types like me and do not want to see all their hard earned income being wasted socialized medicine, welfare, and other gov't projects.whats sad though it seems that the current president has lost sight of many of the traditional conservative ideals yet most people are too dumb to know any better. They just grow up hearing their parents bitch about liberals or yankees so they just slap a "W" sticker to their F150 when they reach voting age and do not actually pay attention to what is going on.[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 9:38 PM. Reason : a]
2/19/2008 9:36:37 PM
North Carolina if anything is actually a Democratic stronghold. They don't vote that way in federal elections cause the federal Democratic Party does not line up with the views of the North Carolina Democratic Party. So about 10-12% of the state's voters are Democrats for state elections and Republicans for federal elections, therefore giving this group of voters the balance of power in the state.On the flipside, the same can be said for New England Republicans somewhat (vote Republican at state-level, vote Democrat at federal level).[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 9:41 PM. Reason : /]
2/19/2008 9:39:57 PM
Because the democratic party these days isn't even close to what it use to be. It's run by far left people.
2/19/2008 9:47:47 PM
i do not mind leftist positions on social issues.I abhor the thought thought of universal healthcare and a gov't that hands out money to everyone who does not feel like working.
2/19/2008 9:51:52 PM
NC and the entire South used to be fully Democratic voting (look at the "The Century in Elections" thread) because historically, the Democratic party has stood for organized labor, agriculture subsidies, and help for the poor and common man. The South has historically been agriculturally based and is poorer than New England and the West, so the core of the historical Democratic platform has always been financially and economically beneficial to NC and the South. Likewise, historically the Republican/Conservative platform has been in favor of big business and richer people, which is why rich states like in New England, and all the businesses in NY and Wallstreet have strong Conservative roots. The shift has happened in the past 50 years or so, where things have more or less switched. I can think of three lines of reasoning off the top of my head, all or none of which may or may not be true in one way or another:1) It has been said that people vote for local and state governments based on issues that directly effect them most, like taxes and subsidies and such, and vote in national elections more based on "values" or "moral issues", which, arguably, have a less direct or immediate effect on a person's well-being. e.g. in principle, Republicans want abortion outlawed, but generally abortion doesn't directly affect their everyday lives, so they will leave it up to the federal government to eventually outlaw abortion, while voting locally for issues that will effect them tomorrow, next week and next year. This line of reasoning would generally support the trends we see, where southern states will vote Democratic on a state level (to benefit themselves directly, usually financially) and Republican nationally (to benefit the country as a whole by instituting "moral legislation"), and "liberal states" will vote Republicans to governor (since they are more likely to be business owners or be well-off, so local tax cuts will benefit themselves directly) but Democrats nationally (to benefit the country by instituting more liberal legislation). 2) Before ~50 years ago, the political parties were more concerned with mostly economic policies rather than moral or value policies. i.e. in the 1930s, you can be sure that gay marriage and abortion weren't at the top of the list of priorities for politicians (although I guess it could be said things like prohibition would fall under that category). Anyway, as such, people would generally vote for their own financial self interests, which if #1 is true, would indicate poor southerners would vote Democratic and more well-off New Englanders would vote Republican. I think it was within the past 50 years, though, that Republican strategists basically hijacked the old-style Financially Conservative Republican Party and turned it into the Religious Right. It was explicitly a strategy to get strong Christians and religious people to vote Republican, meaning the South would follow. The framers of the party purposefully moved the focus of the Republican Party away from the old-style fiscal conservation and made religious morals the centerpiece of the party. By strongly associating Republicans with moral issues like anti-abortion and anti-gay rights, the Republican party has made Christians feel alienated and like bad Christians if they don't vote that way. But, of course, they only vote that way nationally, for a government who has control over the Constitution and federal laws, but locally/state they still vote for policies that have a direct effect on their wallet/job/livelihood. 3) The main points of #1 and #2 has been that people will vote with their wallets locally, and with their hearts nationally. But, they will always look after themselves first (i.e. their wallets). It could be argued that the general financial state of the populous as a whole has risen significantly in the past 50 years, especially after WWII when the USA became the sole superpower and biggest financial giant on earth. So even though there are still plenty of poor people, especially in the South, poor people as a whole are still better well-off than poor people at the beginning of the 1900's, and the Middle Class has grown significantly since then. Therefore, as more and more people become at least solid or comfortable financially, they are more likely to start making their political decisions based on values and morals. So in the past (like 1920) and very poor person (but religious) person would vote straight Democrat across the board, because his financial needs trumped any "values needs" from his politicians. But when that person moved into the Middle Class, he could turn some of his attention away from his day-to-day economic status and more towards moral or values issues.
2/19/2008 10:19:19 PM
The South has been a Republican since right after the Prez signed the Civil Rights Act...went from Dem to Republican and sadly still is(for Presidential elections)It basically changed overnight from Dem to Republican....Eisenhower(sp) said after he signed it that he cost his party the South for at least two generations.My dad remembers how in a instant the Solid South for the Dems turned into the Solid South for the Republicans.[Edited on February 19, 2008 at 11:17 PM. Reason : w]
2/19/2008 11:13:41 PM
I think you mean LBJ.
2/19/2008 11:23:27 PM
Yeah yeah, I have heard all about the "The south is racist and republicans are racist, so southerners vote republican" theory, which would make perfect sense.Except:
2/19/2008 11:45:23 PM
I've always wonder this myself, it happens in a lot of states.Nationally there are a shitload more democrats then republicans, but voter turnout is huge for republicans. An old republican motto is to "wish for rain on the presidential election day".
2/20/2008 12:15:05 AM
2/20/2008 12:45:21 AM
2/20/2008 7:33:20 AM
I have seven very honest answers for this even though they are not very well fit for the Soap Box because they aren't what most of you would like to hear or consider from people these days.... it has little to nothing to do with actual politics....it's much more social and historical than political....I'm not making this up either....this has been explained to me time and time and time again by Democrats (both young and old) in North Carolina when I question them on why they are Democrats when their beliefs are so CLEARLY Conservative...1) Great Depression - "Hoover times were hard times for everybody"...and since Hoover was a Republican he was a terrible person and so were all Republicans2) FDR - He saved them from the Depression...he made jobs...he boosted the economy...he was also a Democrat3) Harry Truman - He blew up Japan and got us out of WWII....this man was a national hero and a Democrat...4) LBJ - a vast majority of North Carolinians are Baptist...it was a struggle for many of these people to vote for that damn dirty Catholic Yankee John F. Kennedy for that very reason....but since this is the generation that was still so affected by the Depression and WWII they had to because all that Republican Eisenhower did was make us look like fools in Korea....then, low and behold he got picked off and the nation was once again saved by a Protestant Texan...Democrat5) Jim Graham - if you've never been to the Piedmont this probably makes so sense to you...but everybody in Rowan, Iredell, Davie, etc is related to him, went to church with him or his family, was taught in school by someone in his family, etc....he got a stronghold on this state many years ago and kept it until he died...he was both a farmer and a Democrat...5) Jim Hunt - this is the same principle as Jim Graham except for the Eastern part of the state....I've known this man my entire life, my parents/aunts/uncles/etc went to high school and church with him, his mother taught everybody in the community, he's related to VERY influential people in several counties in, and around, Wilson...he won the minorities and the teachers over years ago and they make up the majority of the legitimate Democratic party....he also was both a farmer and Democrat....7) I'm not going to give this reason a 'title' because there is none you can give aside from pure racism...this is the one that's going to stir a lot of emotion here and upset a lot of people...this applies largely to the eastern part of the state....and I will swear on my Grandmother's grave that this has been told to me by several, and I mean several, "registered" Democrats....The eastern part of NC is largely rural, poor, and black....since the vast majority of black people are Democrats this means that an inordinate number of Democrats are concentrated in the eastern part of the state....this also means the chances of having black leaders is much greater in these areas....since a large majority of people from NC still retain the racist mindset they were taught as children the only way around this issue is for them to register Democrat, vote for the white people, and ensure that the black people aren't voted into office...then they vote Republican in the National Election....simple as that...these reasons are all along the same vein as what agentlion said but NO WHERE NEAR as political or economical as his explanations....they have so much more to do with "this is how I was raised"....it all boils down to this --- NC is still a good old, racist, frat-boy of a state and this isn't very likely to change in our lifetime....[Edited on February 20, 2008 at 9:29 AM. Reason : typos][Edited on February 20, 2008 at 9:43 AM. Reason : damn...i should reread]
2/20/2008 9:23:24 AM
^Wow, I've never seen Truman overshadow FDR before.
2/20/2008 9:33:00 AM
hahahaha....GAH....I was thinking faster than I was typing....I fixed it...thanks
2/20/2008 9:44:30 AM
Wow, I'm not from the eastern part of the state, so I don't know for sure, but are you telling me people register to vote democrat JUST to keep black people out of office?I mean, if all they care about is keeping the blacks out of office, why not vote democrat in the national election too? It's almost never black people running for president on the democratic side.I mean, in the 2000 election, the republican candidate was a damn Connecticut yankee and the Democrat was a southern baptist Tennessee boy.
2/20/2008 10:30:57 AM
Blackwater's headquarters is in NC, and NC is also a military strongholdAnd there's a bunch of religious fanatics and idiots/racists/bigots... lots of reasons
2/20/2008 10:37:59 AM
My own opinion is people initially started voting Republican in Presidential elections due to the Southern Strategy employed by Nixon. The reason it people have continued to vote Republican can be traced to the union of the Republican Party and the religous right, and the heavy use of social wedge issues in national elections. The strong military presence in the South and the ability of Republicans to protray themselves as stronger on national security has is also a factor, the Dems nominating liberal Northeastern candidates like Dukakis and Kerry certainly hasn't helped matters. Social wedge issues and the military tend not to be big factors in state and local races.
2/20/2008 10:41:12 AM
2/20/2008 10:44:00 AM
Republicans today stand for what most in the south stand for in social terms. The wierdos in the democratic party don't stand for what the working class people stand for.
2/20/2008 10:46:35 AM
2/20/2008 10:54:04 AM
I believe that. I think most people want to work hard and dont want the govt managing thier lives. Most believe that govt at worst is evil and at best is terribly ineffiecent and wasteful with their money, so they want less of it.of course you have a growing population who know nothing else but govt handouts, but they tend to vote for another party.
2/20/2008 11:00:51 AM
^ you are so detached from reality that it's ridiculous.
2/20/2008 11:08:27 AM
Really, why do you think that? You can PM if you wish.Just yesterday I showed you the difference between money spent on war and on entitlements. Did that sink in? You didnt respond, so i figured you choose to ignore it. Didnt fit into YOUR reality did it.
2/20/2008 11:11:35 AM
^^^^No, I agree with him. He is reiterating my point, that people were voting based on social wedge issues rather than their economic best interest.Additionally, I think some of you must have slept through welfare reform. By the way, it was signed by a Democratic president.[Edited on February 20, 2008 at 11:12 AM. Reason : .]
2/20/2008 11:11:59 AM
2/20/2008 11:13:05 AM
Mark, I will give clinton credit for trying to fix a problem. However, it just didnt work.Ill give bush credit for trying to fix SS, just didnt get it through. Where I despise Bush is INCREASING entitlements with the medicare drug plan. Most fiscially irresponsible thing Ive witnessed, well until they pass socialized medicine.I dont think clinton was a terrible president by anymeans. However, I was in school and not paying for that massive tax increase. The stock market soaring really helped offset the hurt of the taxes. Repubs love to harp on the BJ thing. I dont care, however, he did lie under oath and that shouldnt be ignored. imo NAFTA wasnt so hot in teh long run either for our manufacturing base.In hindsight did we miss a chance at OBL? yep. Are there some things he probably wishes he would have done differently, but cant politically say it.. no doubt. Im sure bush is the same.[Edited on February 20, 2008 at 11:19 AM. Reason : .][Edited on February 20, 2008 at 11:20 AM. Reason : .]
2/20/2008 11:16:53 AM
2/20/2008 11:29:10 AM
^^I would argue that Bush tried to kill SS rather than fix it. In the State of the Union he demanded that Congress "fix" it without providing any proposal.SS was "fixed" under Reagan for another several decades, and a similar bipartisan commission will need to address it again.
2/20/2008 11:36:05 AM
2/20/2008 11:40:33 AM
The south did switch almost over night with the change in civil rights legislation. They kept a local democrat mindset because at the time the local democrats were not supporting the civil rights change (dixiecrats). once they switched the never went back.After race relations the republicans had communism that they were fighting and being a strong area militarily we kept alongside those who had our interest.Republicans didn't switch to this ultra religious zealot mindset in the last 50 years, its more like in the last 20. The fall of communism removed a central enemy that the party had keeping it together. So religious fervor replaced its anti-communism counterpart. This change has helped the republicans keep NC's votes at the national level seeing as how there is a strong religious support in the area.clif notes: what someone else said about local governments having to deal with our immediate financial issues and the federal level being representative of our social issues is the most accurate to what the case is.
2/20/2008 12:23:23 PM
2/20/2008 12:48:04 PM
lol i love it when repubs say "we are the party of lincoln"
2/20/2008 2:48:19 PM
^look up who the voting majority for the civil rights act was. hint, it wasnt the democrats.LOL, I love it when dems dont know thier history.
2/20/2008 2:54:00 PM
2/20/2008 3:19:21 PM
After talking to that social worker today. One of the great welfare reforms was that after 12 months after your baby was born you had to show you were looking for employment. Sounds like a good plan right. Except now it just encourages them to stay preggers, which they do to avoid working. Just another well intentioned plan that just doenst work.
2/20/2008 6:16:56 PM
I agree with Flyin Ryan. North Carolina Democrats are on average, slightly more conservative than their national party. North Carolinians have no problem voting for local Democrats for most races involving local candidates (state and national legislature for example) but may have more difficulty lining up with a national candidate who is a bit further left than they are comfortable with.That, or an old axiom that I heard once might hold true: you want Democrats locally because they can have a more direct impact on quality of life but you want a Republican in the White House to handle the larger macro issues like security. Of course, given the current administration, the latter rings a bit hollow these days.
2/21/2008 12:12:42 AM
It seems that you've overlooked the Jessecrats, Reagan Democrats, and a more recent trend in North Carolina and elsewhere: more unaffiliated voters.Unaffiliated voters are an emerging force (2006)
2/21/2008 12:32:36 AM