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Old 11-08-2008, 10:36 PM
 
Location: West Cobb (formerly Vinings)
3,615 posts, read 7,779,916 times
Reputation: 830

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I was expecting there weren't enough of us Northerners to diffuse the redness in Georgia. Do you think we'll pull it off next election? E.g. if metro Atlanta grows by another million?

 
Old 11-08-2008, 10:46 PM
 
823 posts, read 2,216,343 times
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I am thinking 2016. The Georgia exit polls were disappointing. Only like 20% of white people voted for Obama. I don't think we can count on the high black turnout again. By 2016 I think the demographics will shift enough that Georgia will be blue. I am hopeful for 2012 but I think that is too optimistic.
 
Old 11-08-2008, 10:47 PM
 
1,020 posts, read 2,533,106 times
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Everyone makes it sound like Georgia won McCain by 60% or something. He barely got 52%, only a few pts higher than Obama.

And, it really depends. If Obama does a good job, it's quite possible that we will be blue. However, if we're dissatisfied (economically) then we'll be red. In Georgia, it seems to be more about economics these days than social policy.
 
Old 11-08-2008, 10:48 PM
 
Location: West Cobb (formerly Vinings)
3,615 posts, read 7,779,916 times
Reputation: 830
It's sad. Georgia is lagging behind Virginia, North Carolina and Florida which are now the first blue Southern states. I really believe Georgia has the potential to be next and prove it isn't still in the stone ages.

By the way, I was surprised that there were some other regions of the state that were blue other than Atlanta. I thought Atlanta was the only progressive part of Georgia. I guess I was wrong. In fact: from Augusta to Columbus there was a ring of blue.

http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/res...unty/#GAP00map
 
Old 11-09-2008, 12:31 AM
 
Location: West Cobb (formerly Vinings)
3,615 posts, read 7,779,916 times
Reputation: 830
I guess it may not be as bleak as imagined. Democrats made huge gains in the state: Democrats make gains in Georgia | ajc.com (http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2008/11/09/georgia_democrats_gains.html?cxntlid=homepage_tab_ newstab&imw=Y - broken link)

 
Old 11-09-2008, 06:42 AM
 
481 posts, read 2,822,676 times
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I don't know why you think GA is a huge red bastion, McCain did win the state but not by a huge amount, and Obama won Fulton and Dekalb counties 70-30 and 80-20 (that includes such wealthy places as Buckhead, Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, Roswell, Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Milton.....) and though McCain won Cobb and Gwinnett, Democrats made gains in those counties compared to last time. The only reason Cobb and Gwinnett are red is because they are suburban wonderlands that currently still have a large population of old-school thinking parents (that's two votes) and retirees. If you look at their children it's obvious Gwinnett will very soon be blue and Cobb is probably not that far behind, though I think Cobb will eventually just reach a 50/50 point.

Quote:
Originally Posted by netdragon View Post
It's sad. Georgia is lagging behind Virginia, North Carolina and Florida which are now the first blue Southern states. I really believe Georgia has the potential to be next and prove it isn't still in the stone ages.

By the way, I was surprised that there were some other regions of the state that were blue other than Atlanta. I thought Atlanta was the only progressive part of Georgia. I guess I was wrong. In fact: from Augusta to Columbus there was a ring of blue.

http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/res...unty/#GAP00map
I think you have the wrong idea about Georgia. Georgia has never been considered a solidly red state, there are tons of states that have bee red states for decades, not Georgia. Georgia has been a blue state several times; last time was for Clinton. After Florida, of course, Georgia is the southern state that usually goes blue; other than this election, North Carolina and Virginia have been solidly red for decades, far longer than GA.

Last edited by GF72; 11-09-2008 at 07:05 AM..
 
Old 11-09-2008, 07:12 AM
 
3,972 posts, read 12,664,235 times
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In 2006, GA was the most solidly red state re-electing one of the highest percentages of republican incumbents in the country (Perdue, Cox, congressmen, etc).

Outside of Utah and maybe Texas, I am thinking that we have been one of the most predictably red states in the last few years.
 
Old 11-09-2008, 07:20 AM
 
481 posts, read 2,822,676 times
Reputation: 280
Last few years sure, but a few years is not a long time. 1980 presidential election, GA was I think one of only 6 blue states in the entire country. Things go back and forth. I don't think rural GA will change much or at all for a long time (blacks vote blue, whites vote red), but the younger generation in metro Atlanta is certainly far more liberal than the older generation, I think the suburbs will slowly be shifting over in the coming elections.
 
Old 11-09-2008, 07:33 AM
 
541 posts, read 1,145,501 times
Reputation: 662
The pendulum never stops in the middle. It swings from left to right.
 
Old 11-09-2008, 07:45 AM
 
481 posts, read 2,822,676 times
Reputation: 280
until the batteries run out
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