The 5 Key Constituencies Of The 2020 Democratic Primary
Nate Silver:
So for the 2020 Democratic nomination, weve resolved to entertain multiple hypotheses about the contest simultaneously. Perhaps the party will decide, and so we should be looking at how much support each candidate has from party elites. Perhaps the candidate most dissimilar to Trump will win, and so we should be evaluating the candidates based on that criteria. Perhaps the primary is just so hard to forecast that you might as well look at the polling, crude as it might be. (It has more predictive power than you might think.)
Well see. But we nonetheless think that (despite its mixed success in 2016) the coalition-building model is also a useful tool, especially if we make a few tweaks to how we applied it four years ago.
Just as with the Republicans in 2016, the concept this time around involves considering five key groups of Democratic voters. Here are those groups:
+ Party Loyalists
+ The Left
+ Millennials and Friends
+ Black voters
+ Hispanic voters (sometimes in combination with Asian voters)
Youll notice that these groups arent mutually exclusive. A 26-year-old Latina who identifies as a democratic socialist would belong to groups 2, 3 and 5, for example. There might be modest tension between some of the groups for instance, between Party Loyalists and The Left but its possible to imagine candidates who appeal to voters in both of those constituencies. (Ohios Sherrod Brown or Massachusettss Elizabeth Warren might appeal to both The Left and Party Loyalist voters, for example.) Indeed, whichever candidate wins the Democratic nomination is going to have at least some buy-in from all five groups, even if some groups dont buy in beyond considering the nominee the lesser of two evils against Trump.