Forget Nate Silver: Meet The Guy Who Called 2012 In 2002 [View all]
Calling all 50 states the day before the election as Nate Silver did is one thing predicting President Obamas winning majority 10 years in advance is hard to top.
But thats what Ruy Teixeira did. Since 2002, when Democrats were at a low point and sinking lower, Teixeira has consistently argued that long-term demographic trends pointed to brighter days ahead for the party. He and John Judis published a book that year, The Emerging Democratic Majority, that envisioned a governing majority in the next decade consisting of three rapidly growing voting blocs women, minorities, and professionals.
Along with young voters, these three groups are credited with powering Obamas 2008 and 2012 victories. Latinos were critical in contests across the country on Tuesday, especially in Western states like New Mexico (no longer even a swing state), Nevada, and Colorado. African American turnout helped put Obama over the top in states like Ohio. Huge advantages with women helped secure states like Iowa (28% gender gap). And a growing professional class in Virginia and North Carolina solid red states when Teixeira published his book put the former in Obamas camp for a second straight election and kept the latter competitive until the end.
Its easy to forget now, but after President Bush won re-election in 2004, there was a popular school of thought that America was entering an extended period in which Republicans would hold an unshakable majority. Karl Rove claimed the results as a realignment in which evangelical and suburban turnout would destroy the Democrats viability as a national party. Other observers like Michael Barone backed him up. Perhaps not coincidentally, both of them predicted a Romney landslide last week.
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