In 2008, Barack Obama was elected as America’s first urban president, with large victories in the biggest urban centers. What lessons should 2016’s potential candidates be taking from these victories? In new research which examines election results in 92 ‘core’ counties – which accounted for 35 million votes in 2012 – Joshua D. Ambrosius finds that President Obama identified with urban voters in the way that Republicans could not. He argues that this is not likely to change in the near future, as the urban electorate is identifying less and less with the Republican Party, which is doing little to claim cities as their own
Red and Blue America has become the spatial metaphor for an electoral divide on two main dimensions ...
In this manuscript, we reexamine claims about the geography of electoral success of African American...
In this fact sheet, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting data for nearly 9,000 rur...
Despite talk of collapsed Democrat support for Clinton, her performance in urban areas was very stro...
The red/blue dichotomy describing presidential elections, while criticized, is ubiquitous: Red state...
An Obama presidency is an opportunity for our political leadership, of both parties, to stop denigra...
In this brief, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting patterns over the last five pr...
Joseph Biden won the 2020 presidential election because Democratic support increased across the enti...
In the aftermath of the 2012 presidential election, a good deal of commentary held that President Ob...
The political landscape of the United States of America experienced a momentous historical shift on ...
Many media post-mortems of the 2012 presidential race assume that the sluggish economy made Mitt Rom...
Does a community’s proximity to a presidential field office impact presidential election results? Ap...
Obama cannot recreate the 2008 campaign because he is now the incumbent, but he should not run from ...
Obama‘s record-shattering fundraising was a key piece of his election victory allowing him to not on...
© 2018 The socio-spatial structure of US metropolitan areas is the foundation of their electoral geo...
Red and Blue America has become the spatial metaphor for an electoral divide on two main dimensions ...
In this manuscript, we reexamine claims about the geography of electoral success of African American...
In this fact sheet, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting data for nearly 9,000 rur...
Despite talk of collapsed Democrat support for Clinton, her performance in urban areas was very stro...
The red/blue dichotomy describing presidential elections, while criticized, is ubiquitous: Red state...
An Obama presidency is an opportunity for our political leadership, of both parties, to stop denigra...
In this brief, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting patterns over the last five pr...
Joseph Biden won the 2020 presidential election because Democratic support increased across the enti...
In the aftermath of the 2012 presidential election, a good deal of commentary held that President Ob...
The political landscape of the United States of America experienced a momentous historical shift on ...
Many media post-mortems of the 2012 presidential race assume that the sluggish economy made Mitt Rom...
Does a community’s proximity to a presidential field office impact presidential election results? Ap...
Obama cannot recreate the 2008 campaign because he is now the incumbent, but he should not run from ...
Obama‘s record-shattering fundraising was a key piece of his election victory allowing him to not on...
© 2018 The socio-spatial structure of US metropolitan areas is the foundation of their electoral geo...
Red and Blue America has become the spatial metaphor for an electoral divide on two main dimensions ...
In this manuscript, we reexamine claims about the geography of electoral success of African American...
In this fact sheet, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting data for nearly 9,000 rur...