By Steven Hill and Rob Richie
OpEdNews.Com
In their recently acclaimed book, "The Emerging Democratic
Majority," John Judis and Ruy Teixeira make the case that long-term
demographic trends favor the Democratic Party. Given the electoral
letdown suffered by the Democratic Party in the 2002 and 2000 elections,
and also throughout the 1990s as the Democrats lost control of the
Congress and the presidency, Judis and Teixeira's themes have offered a
ray of hope in a dismal political landscape.
But a stable Democratic majority in the Congress or the Presidency is
not likely to emerge anytime soon, and here's why: because even if Judis
and Teixeira are correct that the demographics are shifting toward the
Democratic side, structurally our 18th century winner-take-all political
system will continue to favor conservatives and the Republican Party.
Unless confronted by reformers, that structural bias trumps the shifting
demographics.
Electoral battles for the House, the Senate and the presidency are
fought out district by district and state by state in winner-take-all
contests -- not on a national basis. So the national polls on which
Judis and Teixeira rely for their analysis are less and less meaningful.
The problem is where Democrats and Republicans live. Democrats tend
to live heavily concentrated in the Blue America urban areas, with
Republicans more evenly dispersed in the Red America rural areas as well
as suburban areas. The fact is, when the national vote is tied,
Republicans still win a healthy majority of Congressional seats.
Indeed in 2000, even as Al Gore beat George Bush by a half-million
votes, and the combined center-left Gore-Nader vote had an even bigger
lead, Bush beat Gore in 227 out of 435 U.S. House districts and in 30
out of 50 states. New U.S. House districts are even more lopsided, with
Bush's advantage now rising to 237 to 198. It's no coincidence that
Republicans currently hold 229 U.S. House seats.
An issue like gun control is a great example. National polls have
shown for some time that, nationally, the public wants gun control. But
that doesn't make a bit of difference, because most of those people who
want gun control live in states and congressional districts that already
are locked up for the Democratic Party, particularly in the urban areas
of Blue America. What matters are the battleground states (for the
presidency and Senate) and battleground congressional districts (for the
Congress), and those electorates either don't care as much about gun
control or actively oppose it. In the aftermath of Election 2000, many
Democrats now believe that Gore's pre-campaign support for gun control
may have cost him such rural states as West Virginia, Missouri,
Kentucky, Ohio, Arkansas and his own state, Tennessee.
Even if there are more Democratic voters, to make a difference they
need to be moving into areas now held by Republicans, not into current
Democratic strongholds. If the "Democratic majority" emerges
mostly in states and districts where Democrats already are strong, it
just increases their winning majorities in those areas -- without
changing the outcome of presidential winners or congressional
majorities. If it occurs in states and districts where it's not enough
to overcome safe Republican majorities, again no electoral results will
change.
Ultimately it will take a supermajority of Democratic voters to win a
bare majority of Democratic seats -- particularly progressive Democratic
seats.
Also, the distortions resulting from the redrawing of legislative
district lines can turn a statewide partisan majority into a minority of
legislative seats, and Republicans seem more conniving and successful at
this backroom dealing. For instance, Virginia Democrats in 2001 won
their first gubernatorial race since 1989, but Republicans went from
barely controlling the statehouse to a two-thirds majority. How?
Republicans drew the district lines. In Florida, Democrats were
strong enough to hold both U.S. Senate seats and gain a virtual tie in
the presidential race, but with full control over redistricting
Republicans went from a 15-8 edge in U.S. House seats to an overwhelming
18 to 7 advantage. Republicans also have won lopsided shares of seats in
Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania due to control over redistricting, and
now the Tom DeLay-led GOP in Texas is seeking to re-redistrict their
House districts to pick up another 5 to 7 seats.
Moreover, the Democrats did not leave themselves very many
opportunities for retaking House seats. In states like California, where
the Democrats controlled redistricting, they opted to protect their
incumbents rather than try to gobble up more seats like the GOP has done
in other states.
Teixeira and Judis try to account for these factors to some degree on
pages 69-72 of their book, but their analysis of this is brief, overly
optimistic, and unconvincing. Also, they and others point to the
increasing migration of Latinos to the heartland, as well as states like
California, Florida, and Texas, as a trend that will overturn the
Republican applecart. Certainly, the Latinoization of the U.S. is one of
the "hopeful" scenarios, but the horizon for that is more like
20 years, not ten.
Similar arguments also can be made for the presidential election,
which is won or lost in a handful of battleground states, and the U.S.
Senate.
Both of these have a structural bias that awards more per capita
representation to low-population states, which in turn favors the
Republican Party and its candidates, and will tend to frustrate any
emerging Democratic majority.
Thus, due to the distortions, peculiarities, and lack of
proportionality built into our 18th-century winner take all,
geographic-based, political system, winning a majority of votes does NOT
necessarily mean you end up with a majority of seats. Winner-take-all
means "if I win, you lose," and in that zero sum game the
Democrats will continue to come out on the short end of the stick. The
Republican Party and its think tanks seem to understand this much better
than the Democrats.
Relying on our analysis, one can make a strong case that the hope for
the Democratic Party lies in enacting full representation electoral
systems. With full representation (also known as proportional
representation), the Democrats as well as the Republicans will win their
fair share of legislative seats that matches their proportion of the
popular vote. Redistricting and demographic trends will not distort
outcomes and produce such exaggerated results. Only with full
representation systems will the types of demographic shifts identified
by Judis and Teixeira, that perhaps over time should favor an emerging
Democratic majority, ever have a chance to win at the ballot box.
Steven Hill is a senior analyst at the Center for Voting and
Democracy (www.fairvote.org) and author of "Fixing Elections: The
Failure of America's Winner Take All Politics," which is out in
paperback this month (www.FixingElections.com). Rob Richie is executive
director of the Center.
For more information about CVD's upcoming national conference,
"Claim Democracy," November 22-23 in Washington, D.C., backed
by a broad range of pro-democracy groups, visit www.democracyusa.org/events/conference.html