US The Democrats Are Committing Partycide

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The Democrats Are Committing Partycide
Opinion by Jerusalem Demsas

As California goes, so goes the nation, but what happens when a lot of Californians move to Texas? After the 2030 census, the home of Hollywood and Silicon Valley will likely be forced to reckon with its stagnating population and receding influence. When congressional seats are reallocated to adjust for population changes, California is almost certain to be the biggest loser—and to be seen as the embodiment of the Democratic Party’s failures in state and local governance.

The liberal Brennan Center is projecting a loss of four seats, and the conservative American Redistricting Project, a loss of five. Either scenario could affect future presidential races, because a state’s Electoral College votes are determined by how many senators and representatives it has. In 2016, after her loss to Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton argued that she’d “won the places that are optimistic, diverse, dynamic, moving forward”—an outlook that she contrasted with Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan. But now Democrats’ self-conception as a party that represents the future is running headlong into the reality that the fastest-growing states are Republican-led.

According to the American Redistricting Project, New York will lose three seats and Illinois will lose two, while Republican-dominated Texas and Florida will gain four additional representatives each if current trends continue. Other growing states that Trump carried in this month’s election could potentially receive an additional representative. By either projection, if the 2032 Democratic nominee carries the same states that Kamala Harris won this year, the party would receive 12 fewer electoral votes. Among the seven swing states that the party lost this year, Harris came closest to winning in the former “Blue Wall” of Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania—at least two of which are likely to lose an electoral vote after 2030. Even adding those states to the ones Harris won would not be enough to secure victory in 2032. The Democrat would need to find an additional 14 votes somewhere else on the map.

Population growth and decline do not simply happen to states; they are the result of policy choices and economic conditions relative to other states. Some states lose residents because their economy hasn’t kept up with the rest of the country’s. But in much of blue America, including California and New York, economic dynamism and high wages aren’t enough to sustain population growth, because the skyrocketing cost of shelter eclipses everything else. The amenities that these states offer—the California coastline, the New York City cultural scene—start to look like the historic molding on a house with its roof caved in. Policy failures are dragging down the Democrats’ prospects in two ways: by showing the results of Democratic governance in sharp, unflattering relief, and by directly reducing the party’s prospects in presidential elections and the House of Representatives.

California, New York, and other slow-growing coastal Democratic strongholds have taken an explicitly anti-population-growth tack for decades. They took for granted their natural advantages and assumed that prosperity was a given. People willingly giving up their residencies in these coastal areas is a sign of how dismal the cost of living is.

While the media are likely to pick up on anecdotes about wealthy people complaining about tax levels and political norms in liberal states, data show that population loss is heavily concentrated among lower-income people and people without a college degree. In an analysis of census data, the Public Policy Institute of California found that more than 600,000 people who have left the Golden State in the past decade have cited the housing crisis as the primary reason.

When people vote with their feet, they’re sending a clear signal about which places make them optimistic about the future. What does it say about liberal governance that Democratic states cannot compete with Florida and Texas?

Remarkably, none of this happened by accident. A hostility toward population growth and people in general has suffused the politics of Democratic local governance. The researcher Greg Morrow meticulously documented the political effort in Los Angeles to stop people from moving to the city over the back half of the 20th century. In the early 1970s, the UCLA professor Fred Abraham pushed for growth limits, arguing, “We need fewer people here—a quality of life, not a quantity of life. We must request a moratorium on growth and recognize that growth should be stopped.” Morrow also points to comments from the Sierra Club, which recommended “limiting residential housing … to lower birth rates.” Such arguments preceded a now infamous downzoning in the ’70s and ’80s, which substantially reduced the number of homes that could be legally built, slashed the potential population capacity of Los Angeles from an estimated 10 million people to 4 million, and spurred one of the nation’s most acute housing and homelessness crises. Self-styled progressives and liberals in blue communities across the country have taken similar approaches, all but directing would-be newcomers to places like Texas and Florida.

Contrast this attitude with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s boast, in a press release during his unsuccessful presidential-primary campaign, that “people are flocking to Florida and fleeing California.” DeSantis has pursued pro-growth housing policies that allow working-class people to afford housing in his state.

For a long time, failures of local governance have remained divorced from the national political conversation. What can President Joe Biden have to do with the decision of Marin or Westchester County to refuse new housing supply? But national Democrats cannot overlook the issue any longer. As researchers from the Economic Innovation Group recently noted, the biggest declines in Democrats’ vote share from 2020 to 2024 occurred in the most expensive and most populous counties.

In the days since Harris’s defeat, Democrats have defended Biden’s tenure by arguing that inflation was beyond the president’s control, or pointing to other economic accomplishments. But no Republican stopped San Francisco from building housing, and Trump is not responsible for New York City’s byzantine housing-permitting regime. (In fact, as I write this, New York is on the verge of watering down a proposal that would ease the construction of apartment buildings and smaller homes.) In the course of my work, I hear many policy makers and residents in blue communities lament their intractable housing crises, seemingly unaware that many places have solved a supposedly insurmountable problem. The only difference is those places are in states run by Republicans.

It is not too late to reverse California’s stagnation—or that of New York and other expensive states. The cost of housing is quite literally a signal for how many millions of people would love to live in those places. Yet, in the aftermath of Trump’s reelection, as several Democratic governors have telegraphed their intent to act as bastions of resistance in the coming years, none has focused on the issue that has most hollowed out the promise of liberal America. Nowhere in these headline-seeking pronouncements is a plan to address the housing and cost-of-living crisis or even a reckoning with the failures that produced the status quo. In part, this is due to Democrats’ failure to understand the link between their anti-growth policies at the state and local level and the national viability of their party. For years, Democrats have gotten to represent the growing, vibrant parts of this country and have become complacent, presuming economic dominance even in the absence of good policy. But last week’s results should not have shocked state and local Democratic policy makers—people have been voting with their feet for years.
 
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Yet, in the aftermath of Trump’s reelection, as several Democratic governors have telegraphed their intent to act as bastions of resistance in the coming years, none has focused on the issue that has most hollowed out the promise of liberal America. Nowhere in these headline-seeking pronouncements is a plan to address the housing and cost-of-living crisis or even a reckoning with the failures that produced the status quo. In part, this is due to Democrats’ failure to understand the link between their anti-growth policies at the state and local level and the national viability of their party. For years, Democrats have gotten to represent the growing, vibrant parts of this country and have become complacent, presuming economic dominance even in the absence of good policy. But last week’s results should not have shocked state and local Democratic policy makers—people have been voting with their feet for years.
This is naive to a hilarious degree. They know the answer to making housing and cost of living reasonable, its kick out all the fucking illegals and remove the mountains of red tape around urban/rural construction.

They won't do it because illegals keep the campaign slush fund rolling from corps using the cheap slave labor and the red tape is how they are going to harvest cash from real estate developers to attempt to pay for all the debt the states have incurred due to corruption, gross incompetence and pie in the sky policies.

Mind you, illegals and red tape are actively hurting them (and every other ACTUAL American) in the long term, but they will just keep kicking that can until it becomes someone else's problem (the one fatal flaw of all Democracies).
 
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tl&dr; the people who vote for us keep moving to shitty interior states, wtf????
He absolutely has it backwards thinking the housing prices are a reflection of the number of people who want to move to an area, instead of how fucking difficult it is to build any housing in that area.
 
tl&dr; the people who vote for us keep moving to shitty interior states, wtf????
He absolutely has it backwards thinking the housing prices are a reflection of the number of people who want to move to an area, instead of how fucking difficult it is to build any housing in that area.
It’s a chick. With an unfortunate hairline
IMG_0970.jpeg
 
tl&dr; the people who vote for us keep moving to shitty interior states, wtf????
He absolutely has it backwards thinking the housing prices are a reflection of the number of people who want to move to an area, instead of how fucking difficult it is to build any housing in that area.
I think the key finding is that disgruntled republicans or leaning republicans have moved to other friendly states making them go red and giving them more electoral votes + representatives. “No don’t move to a state that shares your values! Stay here with your money and where your vote doesn’t matter” is the kinda seething we’ll be getting from political commentators.

Also it touches on that here:
Remarkably, none of this happened by accident. A hostility toward population growth and people in general has suffused the politics of Democratic local governance. The researcher Greg Morrow meticulously documented the political effort in Los Angeles to stop people from moving to the city over the back half of the 20th century. In the early 1970s, the UCLA professor Fred Abraham pushed for growth limits, arguing, “We need fewer people here—a quality of life, not a quantity of life. We must request a moratorium on growth and recognize that growth should be stopped.”
 
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I have seen this so many times. The bush election wins were supposed to be the end of the DNC, the 2006 house and senate spanking, and 2008 Obama win should have been the end of the RNC, or the spanking of 2010 for the DNC, and on and on.

It would be wonderful if both parties dissolved. But that is why this is a clickbait headline. Nothing ever happens.
 
I have seen this so many times. The bush election wins were supposed to be the end of the DNC, the 2006 house and senate spanking, and 2008 Obama win should have been the end of the RNC, or the spanking of 2010 for the DNC, and on and on.

It would be wonderful if both parties dissolved. But that is why this is a clickbait headline. Nothing ever happens.
The democrats are probably going to end up absorbing the pro-business pro-immigration never Trumper republicans. They very well could win the next presidential election but it’ll be harder for them due to the population shift. Also I don’t know who’ll replace Trump. That’s a very big if. A lot can happen in 4 years.
 
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Just another day where Democrats are caught eating each other.

[EDIT]: Fixed image size. The solar eclipse is now over.
 
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They won't do it because illegals keep the campaign slush fund rolling from corps using the cheap slave labor and the red tape is how they are going to harvest cash from real estate developers to attempt to pay for all the debt the states have incurred due to corruption, gross incompetence and pie in the sky policies.
This may be the same thing but the mayor of Chicago, after promising not to raise property taxes, wanted to raise 300 million in property taxes--150m would go to taking care of illegals, and the other half for other things (hmmmm...). City council unanimously said no, so now he's going back to the people and only raising it 150m, all for illegals. There's gotta be some money laundering in here somewhere.
 
As it turns out, the American refugees from California and New York fled to red states and voted red instead of voting for the same things that ruined the states they fled. The talk about a Blue (or even a Purple) Texas is officially dead, and I think that Democrats have become extinct in Florida at this point, lol.

If that isn't proof of the Democrats committing party suicide, then I don't know what is.
 
As it turns out, the American refugees from California and New York fled to red states and voted red instead of voting for the same things that ruined the states they fled. The talk about a Blue (or even a Purple) Texas is officially dead, and I think that Democrats have become extinct in Florida at this point, lol.

If that isn't proof of the Democrats committing party suicide, then I don't know what is.

I’m starting to think the whole “Texans, reject Californians!” was a psyop. If someone from New England came to the Midwest, renounced their ways, and said nigger as an oath of trust in front of me? I would welcome them with open arms and ask them about those Einstein bagels with caffeine and protein baked in
 

I love my state so much. I'm not even that mad that a bunch of them are coming over here or that Austin has always been a super-leftist hub and is only getting more and more blue. Let them spend some time around us "southerners" in our wonderful state. We will re-moralize these folks. Reverse all that Hollyweird brainwashing and bring anyone with a salvageable nervous system back to the political centerline, where the middle class belongs. within no time at all they will be proud to be a Texan and proud to be American again.
 
It’s a chick. With an unfortunate hairline
Am I wrong in thinking that this is the spitting image of Coach Red Pill if he came back from the dead and trooned out

Just another day where Democrats are caught eating each other.
This is one of the most egregious cases of not thumbnailing I've ever seen on this site
 
This may be the same thing but the mayor of Chicago, after promising not to raise property taxes, wanted to raise 300 million in property taxes--150m would go to taking care of illegals, and the other half for other things (hmmmm...). City council unanimously said no, so now he's going back to the people and only raising it 150m, all for illegals. There's gotta be some money laundering in here somewhere.
Brandon Johnson is a commie and black, of course there's money laundering going on (he's also in cahoots with the teacher's union). Eric Adams, NYC's mayor, was charged with corruption and so was Tiffany Henyard, a mayor of a township in Illinois.
 
I have seen this so many times. The bush election wins were supposed to be the end of the DNC, the 2006 house and senate spanking, and 2008 Obama win should have been the end of the RNC, or the spanking of 2010 for the DNC, and on and on.

It would be wonderful if both parties dissolved. But that is why this is a clickbait headline. Nothing ever happens.
The parties are evolving. The GOP and DNC of 20 years ago are not the same as they are today.
 
It isn't just housing prices/cost of living that's driving folks away from Blue states. There are many factors behind it, including the rising crime rates and the lack of law enforcement going after criminals to prosecute them.
 
It isn't just housing prices/cost of living that's driving folks away from Blue states. There are many factors behind it, including the rising crime rates and the lack of law enforcement going after criminals to prosecute them.
I agree,
I used to live in west Hollywood and while the costs and crime were horrible there was so much to do, hiking, biking, surfing, swimming. You can't get any of that kind of shit in a place like say Kansas City or Dallas Texas. People move to those places because you can get McMansion for cheap without the worry of homeless people turning your street into a favela or trannies molesting your daughter in school. Its just more practical to live in a red state despite the fact its boring as hell.

I do miss west hollywood and california because it was more fun, minus the old gay queens always hitting on me while I was doing nothing but just walking on the sidewalk.
 
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