Exclusive: As elections near, many older,
educated, white voters shift away from Trump's party
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[April 09, 2018]
By Sharon Bernstein and Chris Kahn
(Reuters) - Older, white, educated voters
helped Donald Trump win the White House in 2016. Now, they are trending
toward Democrats in such numbers that their ballots could tip the scales
in tight congressional races from New Jersey to California, a new
Reuters/Ipsos poll and a data analysis of competitive districts shows.
Nationwide, whites over the age of 60 with college degrees now favor
Democrats over Republicans for Congress by a 2-point margin, according
to Reuters/Ipsos opinion polling during the first three months of the
year. During the same period in 2016, that same group favored
Republicans for Congress by 10 percentage points. (Graphic:
https://tmsnrt.rs/2H39Tur)
The 12-point swing is one of the largest shifts in support toward
Democrats that the Reuters/Ipsos poll has measured over the past two
years. If that trend continues, Republicans will struggle to keep
control of the House of Representatives, and possibly the Senate, in the
November elections, potentially dooming President Donald Trump's
legislative agenda.
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“The real core for the Republicans is white, older white, and if they’re
losing ground there, they’re going to have a tsunami,” said Larry
Sabato, a University of Virginia political scientist who closely tracks
political races. “If that continues to November, they’re toast.”
Asked about the swing, Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna
McDaniel cited robust fund-raising and said the party would field strong
campaigns in battleground states. "We are not taking a single vote for
granted,” she said in a statement.
John Camm has been a Republican since the Nixon Administration, but the
63-year-old Tucson accountant says he will likely support a Democrat for
Congress in November. He is splitting with his party over access to
health insurance as well as its recent overhaul of the nation's income
tax system. He also supports gun control measures that the party has
rejected.
"I'm a moderate Republican, and yet my party has run away from that,"
Camm said. "So give me a moderate Democrat."
Camm is not alone in his worries about healthcare. The number of
educated older adults choosing "healthcare" in the Reuters/Ipsos poll as
their top issue nearly tripled over the past two years, from 8 percent
to 21 percent. The poll did not ask respondents precisely what their
concerns about healthcare were.
Typically though, voters' concerns are varied. Some fear the repealing
of the Affordable Care Act, former President Barack Obama's signature
effort to offer subsidized health insurance to millions of Americans and
expand healthcare to the poor. Others cite high prescription drug costs
and the high cost of healthcare in general.
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GRAY VOTE MAGNIFIED
The potential impact of any swing to Democrats is magnified given that
older, educated adults are reliable voters. They also make up a sizeable
portion of the voting population in many districts where elections are
close.
How they vote could decide elections in as many as 26 competitive
congressional districts where Democrats have a shot at winning a seat. A
Reuters analysis of U.S. Census data shows highly educated older voters
make up about 5-10 percent of the population in those areas. Democrats
need to pick up 24 seats to win control of the House of Representatives.
More broadly, older white Americans, regardless of their level of
education, are still more likely to vote for Republicans than Democrats,
but the Republican advantage with this group has been trimmed by about 5
percentage points when comparing the first quarter of 2018 with the
first quarter of 2016.
DISPROPORTIONATE POWER
Older, educated voters have even more clout in the Arizona's 2nd
Congressional District, where John Camm lives.
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President Donald Trump walks as he returns to the White House after
a trip to Lewisburg, West Virginia, in Washington D.C., U.S., April
5, 2018. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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They make up about 10 percent of the population there, the analysis
shows. Adjacent to the University of Arizona Tucson campus and
including some of Arizona's few liberal pockets, it is Arizona's
most competitive district, said Paul Bentz, an Arizona strategist
and pollster who has worked on numerous Republican campaigns.
Older voters in the 2nd district - both with and without college
degrees - were 40 percent of voters in the 2016 election that kept
Congress in Republican hands and brought Trump to power, Arizona
voter data reviewed by Reuters shows.
Bentz said the shift toward Democrats in the Tucson area could be
enough to determine the outcome, but he cautioned against reading
too much into the increased concern about healthcare. He said
Republicans could still win voters with arguments focusing on
immigration and support for the military.
Older, educated voters are also nearly 10 percent of the adult
population in northern New Jersey's hotly contested 11th
Congressional District, three hotly contested Southern California
districts, and highly competitive seats in Illinois, Texas and
Virginia's 10th.
RAISING ANXIETY
Nationally, Democrats plan to campaign strongly for older voters,
focusing on issues such as taxes, healthcare and the economy as
campaigns heat up later this year, party strategists said.
Republicans, meanwhile, are touting the benefits of their tax cuts
and the improved economy.
In an ad that began rolling out last week in Indiana, Priorities USA
Action, the largest Democratic Party fundraising group, highlights
increases to the federal deficit caused by Republican tax cuts. "Now
there's a plan to cut Medicare to pay for it," the ad says, a line
designed to raise older Americans' anxiety about the government
healthcare program for over 65s.
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Priorities spokesman Josh Schwerin said it plans to spend $50
million on such ads in several states, including Arizona,
Pennsylvania and Ohio.
(To read about how healthcare anxieties are looming large in a key
Kentucky House race, click here )
Voters between the ages of 60 and 65 are particularly worried about
healthcare, said Brigid Harrison, a political scientist at Montclair
State University in New Jersey, because they are paying ever higher
private health insurance premiums and are not yet eligible for
Medicare.
Kenneth Johnston, 82 and a registered Republican who was shopping
with his wife on a recent day at a Sprouts Farmers Market store in
Green Valley, south of Tucson, said he is unhappy with his party and
has mixed feelings about Trump.
But he hasn't yet decided how he's going to vote. "I'm worried about
healthcare, but sometimes I just worry about everything," he said.
"I'm old."
--The Reuters/Ipsos daily tracking poll provides a snapshot of
public opinion by surveying more than 65,000 adults during the first
three months of 2016 and 2018, including more than 15,000 people
over the age of 60.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein and Chris Kahn. Additional reporting
by Grant Smith in New York, Howard Schneider in Washington, and Paul
Ingram and Joe Ferguson in Tucson, Arizona.; Editing by Damon Darlin
and Ross Colvin)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
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