this post was submitted on 10 Oct 2024
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[–] SSJMarx@lemm.ee 0 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

See my other comment. The idea that the Reps have captured the poor in the US just isn't founded in anything real - polling shows that Democrats lead across all income levels but they still really lead among poor voters. The Reps' electoral presence is almost all down to gerrymandering and voter disenfranchisement.

[–] pjwestin@lemmy.world 3 points 21 hours ago

Well, A) I didn't say the Democrats had lost the working class. I said that their policies were not targeting the working class. Even this election, Kamala Harris' stump speeches repeatedly focus on the middle class but make no mention of the working class.

And B) those overall numbers don't factor in race or geography. The Democrats still do very strongly amongst black Americans because of the legacy of Civil Rights Act and the Republicans' Southern Strategy, and they are much more likely to live below the poverty line, but the black population is also unevenly distributed throughout the south and in northern urban population centers. Because of the Senate's structure and the Electoral College, winning white working class voters can be a successful path to power in the Midwest and most of the South, where blue-collar whites can deliver GOP victories. In fact, the Republicans have won white working class voters in 8 of the last 11 elections, and that support handed them the presidency in 6 of them.

That's why the Republicans have the reputation of being for the working class, and the Democrats don't. The Republicans are actively working to win working-class whites (and there's some evidence that Trump is gaining ground with working class black and Latino men), while the Democrats are actively trying to win moderate white-collar voters and assuming their base of working class minority voters will turn out