Santa Cruz Sentinel

Conservati­ves go to red states, Democrats to blue

- By Nicholas Riccardi

Once he and his wife Jennifer moved to a Boise suburb last year, Tim Kohl could finally express himself.

Kohl did what the couple never dared at their previous house outside of Los Angeles — the newlyretir­ed Los Angeles police officer flew a U.S. flag and a Thin Blue Line banner representi­ng law enforcemen­t outside his house.

“We were scared to put it up,” Jennifer Kohl acknowledg­ed. But the Kohls knew they had moved to the right place when neighbors compliment­ed him on the display.

Leah Dean is on the opposite end of the political spectrum, but she knows how the Kohls feel. In Texas, Dean had been scared to fly an abortion rights banner outside her house. Around the time the Kohls were house-hunting in Idaho, she and her partner found a place in Denver, where their LGBTQ+ pride flag flies above the banner in front of their house that proclaims “Abortion access is a community responsibi­lity.”

“One thing we have really found is a place to feel comfortabl­e being ourselves,” Dean said.

Americans are segregatin­g by their politics at a rapid clip, helping fuel the greatest divide between the states in modern history.

The split has sent states careening to the political left or right, adopting diametrica­lly opposed laws on some of the hottest issues of the day. In Idaho, abortion is illegal once a heartbeat can be detected in a fetus — around six weeks — and it's a crime to help a minor travel out of state to obtain one. In Colorado, state law prevents any restrictio­ns on abortion. In Idaho, minors aren't allowed gender affirming care, while Colorado allows youths to come from other states to access the procedures.

Federalism — allowing each state to chart its own course within boundaries set by Congress and the Constituti­on — is at the core of the U.S. system. It lets the states, in the words of former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, be “laboratori­es of democracy.”

Now, some wonder whether that's driving Americans apart.

“Does that work as well

in a time when we are so politicall­y divided, or does it just become an accelerant for people who want to re-segregate?” asked Rob Witwer, a former Republican Colorado state lawmaker.

The states' swings aren't simply due to transplant­s, of course. The increasing clustering of Americans into like-minded enclaves — dubbed “The Big Sort” — has many causes. Harvard professor Ryan Enos estimates that, at least before the pandemic, only 15% of the homogeneit­y was due to people moving. Other causes include political parties polarizing on hot-button issues that split neatly on demographi­c lines, such as guns and abortion, and voters adopting their neighbors' partisansh­ip.

“A lot of this is driven by other sorting that is going on,” Enos said.

When Americans move, politics is not typically the explicit reason. But the lifestyle choices they make place them in communitie­s dominated by their preferred party.

“Democrats want to live in places with artistic culture and craft breweries, and Republican­s want to move to places where they can have a big yard,” said Ryan Strickler, a political scientist at Colorado State University-Pueblo.

But something may have changed as the country has become even more polarized. Businesses catering to conservati­ves fleeing blue states have sprouted, such as Blue Line Moving, which markets to families fleeing from blue states to Florida. In Texas, a “rainbow undergroun­d railroad” run by a Dallas realtor

helps LGBTQ+ families flee the state's increased restrictio­ns targeting that population.

The switch might have been flipped during the coronaviru­s pandemic in 2020, which created a class of mobile workers no longer bound to the states where their companies were based. Those who are now mobile are predominan­tly white-collar workers and retirees, the two most politicall­y engaged parts of the national population.

Mike McCarter, who has spearheade­d a quixotic campaign to have conservati­ve eastern Oregon become part of Idaho, said most people didn't pay much attention to state government until the pandemic.

“Then it was like `Oh, they can shut down any church and they can shut down my kids' school?'” McCarter said. “If statelevel government has that much power, you'd better be sure it reflects your values,

and not someone else's values that are forced on you.”

The pandemic helped push Aaron and Carrie Friesen to Idaho. They realized they could take their marketing firm remote from its base near Hilton Head, South Carolina. They'd always planned to return to the West, but California, where Aaron, now 39, was born and raised, and Washington state, Carrie's native state, were both immediatel­y disqualifi­ed because of their progressiv­e politics.

The Friesens and their three children settled on Boise. They loved the big skies, the mountains rearing up behind the town, the plethora of outdoor activities.

And they liked Idaho's pandemic policies. When the Friesens visited, almost no one was wearing masks, which they took as a good sign — they were happy to mask up when sick, but found constant masking pointless.

 ?? KYLE GREEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jennifer and Tim Kohl pose for a photo in their front yard with the American flag and a thin blue line flag in Star, Idaho, on April 14. The couple recently moved to Idaho from the Los Angeles area.
KYLE GREEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jennifer and Tim Kohl pose for a photo in their front yard with the American flag and a thin blue line flag in Star, Idaho, on April 14. The couple recently moved to Idaho from the Los Angeles area.

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