Counties identified as anomalous in the 2004 US presidential election - large metropolitan counties and majority minority counties that voted Republican and non and small-metropolitan counties that voted Democratic, are the subject of a qualitative analysis to assess why they were exceptions to the conventional wisdom of a Red and Blue America polarized along metropolitan-non-metropolitan and modern versus traditional dimensions. Contacts with professional colleagues, and with media and partisan representatives, and visits to selected counties provided valuable insights and helped us to assess the extent to which the county votes in 2008 reinforced or changed the broad Red and Blue dimensions derived from 2000 to 2004
<p>Lines are linear trendlines calculated separately for each level of political identity. If politi...
In this fact sheet, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting data for nearly 9,000 rur...
The election of 2004 appeared to cement in our cultural lexicon the terms “red state” and “blue stat...
Red and Blue America has become the spatial metaphor for an electoral divide on two main dimensions ...
The red/blue dichotomy describing presidential elections, while criticized, is ubiquitous: Red state...
© 2018 In the large literature on the growing polarization of the American electorate and its repres...
One of the most critical influences in American voting behavior is the political split between urban...
American presidential elections have always attracted the interest of the whole world. It is not onl...
ABSTRACT: While the United States has existed as a stable two party democracy since its inception, ...
Voting is quite possibly the most honest thing that an individual can do. Unfortunately, it is not p...
We examine county-level campaign appearances by the Republican and Democratic tickets during the 200...
This paper seeks to determine how region, demographics, and economic characteristics affected county...
<p>Landslides mostly occur for counties with small number of electors. For histogram (a) all countie...
This project addresses the question of whether American elections became more geographically polariz...
In the 2004 presidential election, rural voters tended to favor Republican George W. Bush, while urb...
<p>Lines are linear trendlines calculated separately for each level of political identity. If politi...
In this fact sheet, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting data for nearly 9,000 rur...
The election of 2004 appeared to cement in our cultural lexicon the terms “red state” and “blue stat...
Red and Blue America has become the spatial metaphor for an electoral divide on two main dimensions ...
The red/blue dichotomy describing presidential elections, while criticized, is ubiquitous: Red state...
© 2018 In the large literature on the growing polarization of the American electorate and its repres...
One of the most critical influences in American voting behavior is the political split between urban...
American presidential elections have always attracted the interest of the whole world. It is not onl...
ABSTRACT: While the United States has existed as a stable two party democracy since its inception, ...
Voting is quite possibly the most honest thing that an individual can do. Unfortunately, it is not p...
We examine county-level campaign appearances by the Republican and Democratic tickets during the 200...
This paper seeks to determine how region, demographics, and economic characteristics affected county...
<p>Landslides mostly occur for counties with small number of electors. For histogram (a) all countie...
This project addresses the question of whether American elections became more geographically polariz...
In the 2004 presidential election, rural voters tended to favor Republican George W. Bush, while urb...
<p>Lines are linear trendlines calculated separately for each level of political identity. If politi...
In this fact sheet, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting data for nearly 9,000 rur...
The election of 2004 appeared to cement in our cultural lexicon the terms “red state” and “blue stat...