3/2/14, "Democrats Try Wooing Ones Who Got Away: White Men," NY Times, Jackie Calmes, Royal Oak, Michigan
"Frank Houston knows something about the longtime
estrangement of white men from the Democratic Party. His family roots
are in nearby Macomb County, the symbolic home of working-class Reagan
Democrats who, distressed by economic and social tumult, decided a
liberal Democratic Party had left them, not the other way around.
Mr.
Houston grew up in the 1980s liking Ronald Reagan but idolizing Alex P.
Keaton, the fictional Republican teenage son of former hippies who,
played by Michael J. Fox on the television series “Family Ties,”
comically captured the nation’s conservative shift. But over time, Mr.
Houston left the Republican Party because “I started to realize that the
party doesn’t represent the people I grew up with.”
Now,
as chairman of the Democratic Party in Oakland County, Michigan’s
second largest, Mr. Houston is finding out how difficult it can be to
persuade other white men here to support Democrats, even among the 20 or
so, mostly construction workers, who join him in a rotating poker game.
Mr.
Houston is part of an internal debate at all levels of his party over
how hard it should work to win over white men, especially working-class
men without college degrees, at a time when Democrats are gaining
support from growing numbers of female and minority voters.
It
is a challenge that runs throughout the nation’s industrial heartland,
in farm states and across the South, after a half-century of economic,
demographic and cultural shifts that have reshaped the electorate. Even
in places like Michigan, where it has been decades since union
membership lists readily predicted Democratic votes, many in the party
pay so little attention to white working-class men that it suggests they
have effectively given up on converting them.
Not
Mr. Houston. “There’s a whole cadre of us — of young, white men
political leaders in Oakland County — who are saying, ‘We can’t just
write off 30-year-old to 40-year-old guys, let alone anyone who’s
older.’ ”
So
Mr. Houston and like-minded Democrats are working to deploy new,
data-driven targeting tools to get the message to white men that the
party is more in sync with them than they might think. “We can tell you
to the number how many we need and where they live,” said Matt Canter,
the deputy executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign
Committee.
No
Democratic presidential candidate has won a majority of white men since
Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964. Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama
all prevailed with support of the so-called rising electorate of women,
especially single women, and minorities. But fewer of those voters
typically participate in midterm elections, making the votes of white
men more potent and the struggle of Democrats for 2014 clear.
“Realistically,
winning votes from working-class white men has just been a very tough
political challenge for Democrats,” said Geoff Garin, a Democratic
pollster. With demographic trends favoring Democrats nationally and in
many states, strategists say it makes sense to concentrate resources on
mobilizing women, young people, Hispanics, blacks and other minority
voters.
Democrats
generally win the votes of fewer than four in 10 white men. But they
win eight of 10 minority voters and a majority of women, who have been a
majority of the national electorate since 1984, while white men have
shrunk to a third, and are still shrinking.
White
male voters have been crucial in some past midterms, most clearly in
1994, when they helped Republicans take control of the House for the
first time in 40 years, and again in 2010.
And
this year, Democrats, hobbled by Mr. Obama’s sagging popularity, are
defending many red-state Senate seats, including some in places with few
members of minorities, like West Virginia. A big reason for Democrats’
emphasis on raising the minimum wage is the polling proof that the issue
resonates with all groups, including white men. In Michigan, Mr.
Houston is leading an effort to place a minimum-wage increase on the
November ballot and said it “really polls well with white men.”
Some
white men have proved to be within reach: single men, college students
and graduates with advanced degrees, the nonreligious, and gay men. But
working-class married men remain hardest to win over and, unless they
are in unions, get the least attention — to the dismay of some
partisans.
“You
can’t just give Republicans a clear field to play for the votes of
white working-class men without putting up some sort of a fight because
that just allows them to run the table with these voters, thereby
potentially offsetting your burgeoning advantage among minorities,
single women, millennials,” said Ruy Teixeira, an analyst at the left-leaning Center for American Progress.
“I just think Democrats are having a hard time figuring out how to effectively pursue it,” he added.
What
discourages Democrats is that men’s attitudes shaped over generations —
through debates over civil rights, anti-Communism, Vietnam, feminism,
gun control and dislocations from lost manufacturing jobs and stagnant
wages in a global economy — are not easily altered.
“Democrats
are for a bunch of freeloaders in this world as far as I’m concerned,”
said Gari Day, 63, an Avis bus driver from suburban Detroit.
“Republicans make you work for your money, and try to let you keep it.”
Michael
Bunce, 48, buying parts at a Lowe’s in Southfield, Mich., first
ascribed his Republican bias to fiscal matters, but quickly turned to
social issues like gay rights. “I don’t see why that’s at the top of our
priority list,” he said. “But you say that out in the open, and people
are all over your back.”
Democrats’ gloom about white men was eased temporarily by Mr. Obama’s 2008 election when he won 41 percent of white male voters —
the first time a Democrat exceeded 40 percent since Mr. Carter in 1976.
But their support for his re-election fell to 35 percent, roughly what
Democrats have gotten since they lost to Richard Nixon.
Republicans
say Democrats’ appeals to women, minorities and gays have been
counterproductive with white men. “When you’re spending 60 percent of
your time talking about birth control and Obamacare, not a lot of men
are paying attention to you,” said Brad Dayspring, spokesman for the
National Republican Senatorial Committee.
Among
the Senate races where white men could be decisive are those in
Georgia, where a Democrat, Michelle Nunn, is wooing them in hopes that
many will favorably remember her father, Sam Nunn, a popular former
senator, and in Arkansas, where Senator Mark Pryor, whose father, David
Pryor, was also a longtime senator, is fighting to keep his job with
frequent talk of his Christian faith.
Senator
Mark Warner of Virginia has stood out among Democrats for years with
his efforts to court white working-class men, stumping rural areas and
small towns in Senate and governor’s races. Currently, he is favored to
beat Ed Gillespie, the former Republican Party chairman.
Generally,
however, the Democrats’ Senate majority is at risk, which helps explain
why the party has not tried to revive gun-safety legislation proposed
after the Newtown, Conn., school massacre. Few issues have hurt
Democrats more among working-class white men over time.
“It’s
a bad stigma: If you’re a Democrat, you’re against guns,” said State
Representative Scott Dianda, a Democrat in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.
He is quick to say he is a hunter.
Democrats’
disadvantage in Michigan with white men was plain in a poll of likely
voters last month by the nonpartisan EPIC-MRA. Representative Gary
Peters, the Democratic candidate for Senate, trailed Terri Lynn Land,
the Republican secretary of state, by three percentage points. But among
white men, she led by 21 points.
Mr.
Peters, like Mr. Houston, is from populous Oakland County, but for six
days recently, Mr. Peters traversed Michigan’s northernmost reaches,
prospecting in the subzero cold of the vast Upper Peninsula — home to 3
percent of the state’s population — for votes among the mostly white
residents, known as “Yoopers.” He did what he could to get their
attention. At one point, Mr. Peters spied some fathers with their sons
atop a snow pile for WOLV-FM’s “Yooper Luge.” He got the broadcaster to
introduce him, then borrowed a boy’s plastic disc and skidded downhill. In another town, he stopped to see a single voter: a Republican small-business man.
“The fact that he was there in my conference room speaks volumes,” said the man, Mark Massicotte, 57, president of L’Anse Manufacturing. “It counts for a lot. It tells me he’s listening.”" graph caption, "Percentage of white men voting for a Democratic presidential candidate, 1984-2012,
Top line, white men with college degree, lower line, without degree, National Exit Polls"1984-2012, white men voting democrat, top with coll. degree, bottom without. |
.
No comments:
Post a Comment