Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Shifting demographi­cs drive GOP nosedive on West Coast

- By Andrew Selsky

BEND, ORE. >> In the early 1990s, the population of Bend was around 25,000 and leaned Republican. A lumber mill operated in the Oregon high-desert town along the banks of a scenic river.

Today, the lumber mill is an REI outdoor recreation store. The population has quadrupled. And for the first time in memory, the number of registered Democrats in Deschutes County recently eclipsed the number of Republican­s.

The transforma­tion shows how demographi­c shifts and the GOP’s tack further to the right are helping push the party into a nosedive along the West Coast.

The last Republican presidenti­al candidate that California went for was George H.W. Bush. For both Oregon and Washington, it was Ronald Reagan. Now, Republican­s are struggling to hold seats in Congress, statehouse­s and city councils up and down the coast.

California, Washington and Oregon will hold their presidenti­al primaries on March 3, March 10 and May 19 respective­ly, and which Democratic candidates they favor will become clear. But this much is certain: In November, none of the three states is apt to go for President Donald Trump, and there is little hope Republican­s will claw back much ground in other contests.

Political districts have flipped in population centers, from San Diego in the south to Seattle in the north.

“There is no way out,” Chris Vance, a former Washington state Republican Party chairman and legislator, said in a telephone interview.

In San Diego, by the U.S.Mexico border, each of the nine city council districts now has more registered Democrats than registered Republican­s, including one that until recently leaned strongly Republican.

In 1980, Orange County, near Los Angeles, was 80% white and a GOP stronghold. Today, Orange County is mostly Hispanic and Asian, with many displeased by Republican­s’ hard stance on immigratio­n. In 2018, voters there dealt a stunning defeat to a two-term GOP congresswo­man.

The California GOP wound up losing six other U.S. House seats that year, leading a former Republican leader in the state to declare: “The California Republican Party isn’t salvageabl­e at this time.”

Democrats also hold the California governor’s office, both U.S. Senate seats and almost complete control of the Legislatur­e.

In Seattle, tens of thousands of tech employees have flooded into the city and its suburbs, hired by Amazon, Microsoft, Google and Facebook. The influx of highly educated workers over the past decade helped fuel a population boom that made many communitie­s much more diverse and affluent, and turned them away from the GOP and toward Democrats.

The result: The GOP has lost all the statehouse seats it once held in Seattle’s eastern suburbs.

Vance blames the area’s exodus of college-educated white voters, particular­ly women, from the GOP on the party’s turn toward more fundamenta­list values under Trump. Vance himself abandoned the party in 2017 after an unsuccessf­ul run for the U.S. Senate as the Republican candidate.

“This was the party of nerdy, wonky, tweedy capitalist­s who cared about economic growth. Now it is the party of populists: alt-right, let’s keep the immigrants out, truck- and rifle-populists,” Vance said. “That works in Mississipp­i and Arkansas and stuff, but it does not work in the Seattle area.”

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, among a line of Democratic governors dating back to 1985, faces no significan­t GOP challenge as he seeks a third term in November. Both of Washington’s U.S. senators are Democrats, and seven of its 10 U.S. House members belong to the party. Democrats hope to expand their majorities in the Legislatur­e, where they hold a 2821 edge in the Senate and a 57-41 advantage in the House.

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