By Alan Caruba
The nation united to celebrate
Thanksgiving, but as anyone who follows the polls can confirm, it is sharply
divided. In many ways, half of those polled see America opposite to the other
half.
In early November the Associated Press
reported on a survey of 20,168 voters by Edison Research. It included results
from interviews as voters left a random sample of 281 precincts on Election Day,
November 4. As we know, the results of the election have been interpreted as a
sharp rebuke to President Obama and the Democratic Party. Power in the Senate
shifted to the Republican Party that also gained more seats in the House and
added to the number of governors, bringing them to 29 of the 50
states.
For conservatives that is very good
news. Politically Democrats feel so endangered that one of its top voices, Sen.
Chuck Schumer of New York just announced that passing ObamaCare was a big
mistake, noting that the Party should have focused on the economy.
That is an extraordinary confession
and one that abandons the President whose name is associated with the Affordable
Care Act. The Democratic Party has been captured by the far Left, but Schumer
seemed to be saying it has to move more to the center if it has any hope in the
2016 elections.
The Associated Press reported that
“Fifty-four percent of those who voted for Democrats said the country is headed
in the right direction, while 88 percent of Republican voters think it’s on the
wrong track.” One has to wonder how
anyone could learn that one-out-of-five Americans on Thanksgiving Day was using
food stamps and conclude this reflects the right direction.
On November 7 The Washington Post
reported “With 214,000 jobs
added in October, the unemployment rate ticked down to 5.8 percent, the lowest
level in six years, even as more workers entered the job market.” The official unemployment rate is widely
believed to be half of what the actual rate is nationwide after
one factors in data the bureaucrats ignore or fudge.
Not
surprisingly, “Nearly 9 in 10 of those who voted for Republicans think the
economy is in bad shape, compared with just over half of Democratic
voters.” Here again, the difference is
perceptions is dramatic with conservatives having a more realistic point of
view, but if more than half the Democratic voters think the economy is bad, that
suggests the 2016 elections may reflect the recent midterms.
In
some ways the AP poll depicted a difference based on what one might deem a more
“mature” take on the state of the nation as opposed to those who ignore its
problems to hold a more hopeful one, even if the facts do not support that
judgement. “Sixty-four percent of Republican voters, but only 30 percent of
Democratic voters, think life for the next generation of Americans will be worse
than life today.”
The
failure to embrace reality over propaganda was dramatically demonstrated by a
question about climate change generated a response of “86 percent of those who
backed Democrats” calling it “a serious problem”, while two-thirds of Republican
voters said it was not. This means that 19 years into a planetary cooling cycle
and a winter that has arrived a month early this year, Democratic
voters—liberals—still cling to the belief that climate change, instead of
reflecting the lower radiation levels of the Sun, is caused by human activity
that generates a trace gas called carbon dioxide, all 0.04% of it in the
atmosphere.
In
a world where every day brings news of Islamic barbarism in the Middle East and
Africa, “only 6 in 10 Democratic voters said they were worried by the threat of
terrorism, while “8 in 10 Republican voters” took the threat seriously.
There
are social differences between Republicans and Democrats. Of the Republican
voters, 87% percent were white, while 61% of voters backing Democratic
candidates were; 70% of Republican voters were married, compared with 55% of
Democratic ones.
There
were other differences among the two sets of voters, but suffice to say that
each group lives in its own version of America and there are major gaps in their
perception of the nation and the world.
The
election reflected that a large portion of the voters demonstrated they prefer a
conservative approach to government. If that trend continues—and it likely
will—the 2016 elections will represent a major change from the two terms of
President Obama and a rejection of his domestic and foreign
policies.
Until
then America will remain a nation divided politically and, given our diversity,
within many social groups defined by gender, race, wealth, and age. Demography,
the study of population, suggests that Americans are growing older in larger
numbers than other subsets. Those “old folks” may just be the deciding factor in
coming elections.
©
Alan Caruba, 2014
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