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Blog Post #87: Cancelled Out

I read a book many years ago called “The Signal and the Noise”, by Nate Silver, and I was hooked. Nate has two great skills; he is an incredible data scientist, and an excellent communicator. Think of him like a Dr Karl or Bill Nye but for data. I would recommend giving it a read.

Last night I was reading his Substack post about how the electorate in America no longer split clearly by income, as it has traditionally been. What really got my gears going was this: income directionally aligns with voting Republican, whereas educational attainment correlates strongly with voting Democratic. I know what you’re thinking, aren’t education and income correlated? Yes, yes they are.

Instead of trying to split the baby, think about the outlier exemplars. As Nate puts it, imagine someone who is a high earner but never went past high school. Maybe he runs his own construction company, or works in real estate or resources. While there are always exceptions, the data suggests those people are solidly Republican.

At the same time, conjure up in your mind individuals with high levels of education but low incomes. Academics, journalists, and psychologists all jump to mind. These people are almost always going to vote for Democrats, and do so loudly.

I thought this was an ingenious insight and something I have been thinking about all day. I’m glad I have the opportunity to write about it and share these ideas with y’all.

4 responses to “Blog Post #87: Cancelled Out”

  1. Mutti Avatar
    Mutti

    Why are you so surprised? I would have thought this was politics 101!

    1. Harry Avatar

      Not at all. Historically Republican support was largely comprised of wealthy people, regardless of education, whereas poorer people were solidly Democrat. Trump broke that pattern; and poorer people are now divided across cultural and racial lines. Rural and white voters tilt Republican, whereas urban minorities are more reliably Democratic.

  2. Jason Avatar
    Jason

    I was also surprised by this. But it makes sense. Trump really did create a re-alignment.

    Also, Democratic leadership assumed that policies in line with progressive concepts like “defund the police” and “open borders” would be popular with their minority base. This turned out to be very wrong, e.g.:

    https://www.economist.com/united-states/2022/07/07/democrats-have-a-hispanic-problem

    So as horrible as Trump is (in my opinion), many seem to prefer his rhetoric over the Democrat’s demonstrated policy. Plus, the news media has cried wolf too many times, and many seem not to believe the extent to which Trump personally tried to overturn the 2020 election.

    Anyways, probably nothing new to you! Hard to see our country careening dangerously close to another 4 years of Trump. (Or however long he lives.)

    1. Harry Avatar

      Put this through your podcast rotation, I might write about it tomorrow.

      Very interesting and cogent analysis.

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