The Riverside Press-Enterprise
The GOP is morphing into a multiracial, populist party
What happens when a political party becomes demotic? Before answering the question, note that the word in question is not demonic, from the Greek word daimon, meaning a deity (remember that the Greek gods were notoriously jealous and greedy), but demotic, from the Greek word demos, meaning the people — the same root as democratic.
My question is prompted by the ongoing transformation of the Republican Party, discussed in occasional bits in these columns over the years, with the definitive version set out in Republican political consultant Patrick Ruffini’s “Party of the
People: Inside the Multiracial Populist Coalition Remaking the GOP.”
Ruffini argues convincingly that the classic picture of the two political parties’ constituencies — the Republicans as the party of the rich and ancestral Protestants, the Democrats as the party of the great masses and ethnic and racial minorities — is out of date. It described the nation emerging from World War II 80 years ago.
It stopped being true by the 1990s, when Bill Clinton’s Democrats made major gains among White college graduates clustered in the nation’s 50-some million-plus metropolitan areas, which account for about half the nation’s population.
But the other half of the nation, rural and small-town America, with few college grads, trended Republican. West Virginia, which hadn’t voted for a nonincumbent Republican presidential candidate since 1928, voted for George W. Bush in 2000. Without it, he wouldn’t have won, and the nation wouldn’t have spent weeks wondering who carried Florida.
This realignment of White college grads (call them gentry liberals) toward Democrats and White noncollege grads (demotics) toward Republicans continued. John Judis and Ruy Teixeira’s 2002 book “The Emerging Democratic Majority” predicted that the first trend, if accom