How the GOP Became a (More) Multicultural Party
Neither Democrats nor Republicans seem fully able to wrap their minds around what's happening.

It's been decades since we last saw a winning Republican coalition as multicultural as this one. Not every vote has been counted yet and the exit polls aren't identical, but we can cobble together enough numbers now for a picture to emerge.
Four years ago, according to NBC's exit polls, Hispanics favored Democrat Joe Biden over Republican Donald Trump, 65 percent to 32 percent. This year, Vice President Kamala Harris appears to have gotten just 52 percent of the Latin vote, the worst showing for a Democrat since 2004, while Trump received 46 percent, the best showing for a Republican in modern times. (Yes: Trump did better than George W. Bush, a man whose Texas training always had him outperforming most Republicans among Latino voters.) Among Hispanic men, Trump won an outright majority of 55 percent. Trump carried several heavily Mexican-American counties in South Texas that used to be Democratic strongholds, including one—Starr County—that last went Republican in 1892.
NBC has Harris carrying the Asian vote, but it shifted five points to the right. African Americans are still overwhelmingly Democrats, but black men have gone from voting 13 percent Republican in 2016 to 19 percent in 2020 and now 20 percent in 2024, according to Edison Research. Overall this year, The Independent notes, about one in three nonwhite voters backed Trump.
The movement in this direction had been visible for a while—you'll note that the real bump in Trump's support among African-American men happened four years ago, not this time. But before this month, people had more room to dismiss it: to suggest that those Hispanic Republicans were mostly white Latinos, or refugees from socialist countries, or employees of the Border Patrol. This time the trend is almost impossible to ignore. Minority support for the GOP has grown, not shrunk, over the last decade. We may have to wait till the post-Trump era to find out to what extent that happened despite Donald Trump and to what extent it happened because of him. But more and more, this resembles the movement of many "white ethnic" constituencies—Irish, Italian, Polish, and so on—out of the New Deal coalition in the 1960s and '70s.
Since Democrats often go out of their way to present themselves as the party of racial justice, many of them have a hard time making sense of this. But it shouldn't be surprising that a Korean business owner would like Republican economic policies, that a Mexican pro-lifer would like Republican abortion policies, or that a black man living in a declining Democratic city would object to the ways his town is poorly run. If the GOP weren't so prone to self-sabotage, those voters might have started shifting earlier. Nor should it be surprising if some of the people whose families have already immigrated to America are less interested in bringing in more newcomers behind them. That's a familiar dynamic in immigration politics.
Above all, it shouldn't be surprising if one of the biggest recent political developments in the U.S. (and elsewhere) has started to seep across racial lines. Voters with college degrees have become increasingly likely to be Democrats, and those without college degrees have become increasingly likely to be Republicans. This is not, as some of the crasser interpretations would have it, because Democrats are smarter. It is because there are politically salient differences between people in professions that require college degrees and people in professions that don't: different material interests, different languages for discussing the issues that don't directly affect those interests, different cultural influences shaping those discussions. And those divisions have become more central to electoral politics.
This does not mean anything so crude as "people who went to college are on one side of the culture wars, and people who didn't are on the other." There are, after all, plenty of degreeless Americans who like to have sex with people whose genitals match their own. And indeed, survey data suggest that the general population, including the Republican part of it, is more socially liberal on questions of race and sexual orientation than it was a decade ago. But there is the sort of social liberalism that is summed up by the phrase live and let live, and there is the sort summed up by a middle manager briskly strolling into a room, dropping a six-pound tome on the table, and announcing: Here are the new rules. We will email you the updates each Tuesday. To a lot of people outside that college-educated tome-dropper's social class, including some of the people the fat rulebook is theoretically there to help, that second approach looks more like micromanagement than liberation. The more Democrats are associated with it, the worse for them—and the worse for the buried live-and-let-live cause.
Needless to say, knowledge-class Republicans have countless ways to alienate people too. The number of Americans interested in listening to the ramblings of an anti-trans obsessive probably isn't much larger than the number interested in listening to a lecture on how to make punctuation more inclusive. But after years of keeping culturally or economically conservative minorities pent up in their party, the Democrats currently have more to lose.
The wildest thing about this development may be the number of the Republicans who don't seem any more capable than the Democrats of wrapping their heads around it. I still see right-wingers warning that immigration is a plot to import a blue majority. Trump's gains with minorities are not just a rebuke to all the progressives who assumed nonwhite voters would belong to them forever; they're a rebuke to all the conservatives who agreed with them.
Along those lines, let's check in with the group that loomed largest in the right-wing fears of the first two decades of this century. In the 1990s, there were some tentative moves on the right to expand the alliance of socially conservative Catholics, Protestants, Mormons, and Jews to include socially conservative Muslims as well, inching toward the day when the sorts of folks who talk about "Judeo-Christian values" start invoking "Abrahamic values" instead. 9/11 brought that effort to a crashing halt. But then the Gaza war scrambled the picture yet again, opening a space not just for protest votes against an administration funding Israel's side of the war but for Islamoconservatives to rethink their alliances on a deeper level.
There hasn't been a clear-cut nationwide Muslim movement toward Trump, who isn't exactly a Gaza dove himself; the data we have so far on the Muslim vote is contradictory, with different organizations offering different tentative results. But we can see how people cast their ballots in the two Michigan towns that in the 2010s were most likely to send SHARIA LAW IS COMING TO THE U.S.!!! stories rippling through the right-wing press. In Hamtramck, America's first majority-Muslim city, Harris just barely squeaked by Trump, 46 percent to 43 percent, with 9 percent backing the Green Party's Jill Stein. (One of Trump's supporters in Hamtramck was Mayor Ameer Ghalib, who endorsed him in September.) In nearby Dearborn—America's first majority-Arab city, though not all of those Arabs are Muslims—Trump won outright: He got 42 percent and Harris got 36 percent. A full 18 percent voted for Stein, a Jew picking up Islamic support like she was Evan McMullin among the Mormons.
Depending on what happens next in the Middle East, it's not hard to imagine a future where a lot of those Muslim votes move back into the Democratic column. But it's also not that hard to imagine a future where the next SHARIA LAW IS COMING TO THE U.S.!!! screed appears on the Occupy Democrats Facebook feed. Me, I'll hope for a future where neither major party thinks of minority voters as either something to take for granted or a no-go zone.
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Skin color politics, a plethora of genders, pronouns police, being unable to define “woman”, child genital mutilation, and Bidenflation are not popular amongst folks with traditional values.
The GOP is still the party of Lincoln.
Like Lincoln [rising intonation] Lincoln? Or Lincoln [falling intonation] Lincoln?
The US isn’t a melting pot anymore.
https://nypost.com/2019/01/29/america-isnt-a-melting-pot-anymore/
There are two components to culture, behaviour (physical) and religion (spiritual).
The first is bound by the truth, reality, that we can prove with logic and science and all agree on. We make good laws with justice.
The second isn’t because it deals with what cannot be proven as truth. It remains unknown.
In culture, diversity brings division. This division when carried from the spiritual to the physical can be toxic. For example, when one “god” says make noise all night, while another “god” says sleep. Applied like this, a “salad bowl” doesn’t work in a culture.
There are two solutions to this.
The culture maintains a homogeneous religion, reducing diversity and division within but risking conflict and war with other cultures.
Or
Recognize, accept and separate the physical and spiritual aspects of culture. Agreeing on the rules for behaviour. Acting rightly not wrongly based on the truth, reality, which all rational people must recognize accept and share in peace. Leaving the spiritual for the unknown, to remain where it belongs in our thoughts and imagination. To help guide us to discern new truths with correctly applied logic and science that we can all share in peace.
The first, where belief defines truth, leads to perpetual conflict, war and genocide.
The second, where belief requires nothing more than faith, allows us to get along in peace.
Our spiritual beliefs can be a salad bowl as long as our physical actions are in harmony, a melting pot.
The “toxicity” around immigration, is caused by the fact that we don’t all recognize this logic as truth. Yet.
In the time of Lincoln, a "traditional value" was the right to slave ownership. Lincoln also signed the Act to Encourage Immigration in 1864.
Your bumper sticker needs some nuance.
Your
Biden-HarrisHarris-Walz bumper sticker needs some updating. Maybe a silver medal after it to indicate second place.Lincoln emancipated those slaves in the rebelling Democratic Party controlled states. In my state, slavery was never allowed and not considered a traditional value. As long as Team D keeps believing their echo chamber, more outcomes like Tuesday are possible.
While acknowledging that any reference to Lincoln is going to lack nuance (presumably you mean multi-cultural Lincoln and not Big Government Lincoln or “The other side should just admit they’re the racist oppressors and assassinate the President.” Lincoln), his criticism seems to be a childish, retarded “You mean like clubbing women over the head and dragging them back to their cave ‘traditional values’? Because nobody has ever invented new values for *others* to employ out of tradition in the last 10,000 yrs.”
But, yes, the party of Lincoln has *always* been a/the multi-cultural party. The notion that it hasn't/isn't/wasn't is pure, unadulterated, fabrication and/or historical retcon.
Because to the right, they're not 'minorities', they're Americans.
+1
Latinx.
Free Palestine.
Treat people as individuals.
7 word article.
>>It's been decades since we last saw a winning Republican coalition as multicultural as this one.
only two people in decades moved Americans to remember they're Americans ... not evil (R) v. evil (D)
Lemme guess… Clarence Thomas, Condeleeza Rice, Colin Powell, Alberto Gonzalez, and George W. Bush doesn’t count towards multiculturalism but Ketanji Brown Jackson, Anthony Blinken, Mark Milley, Merrick Garland, Kamala Harris, and Joe Biden count as multicultural because KBJ may or may not have a vagina.
well … meant more Reagan/Trump because both voter coalitions were the true Benneton ads
did your list (Clarence Thomas, Condeleeza Rice, Colin Powell, Alberto Gonzalez) cut their teeth under one of Reagan’s three terms?
voter
The most important thing. Not that globalism irrevocably means less actual multiculturalism, but that as we run out of actual different cultures to multi-, we simply redefine the term and redraw the lines between the voters and their representatives as though that means something policy-wise. Like voting for welfare is good if black people want it and only a white Republican wouldn't, or shouldn't, give it to them.
It's the same sort of "Closet Progressive" celebratory parallax as "The vote totals have dropped worryingly from that election we fortified."
yes exactly. they redrew the lines between the voters so hard two generations forgot or never learned We. The. People.
edit: and I seriously bought into Children's Television Workshop this whole skin color brawl was new
How about bin Laden?
for like 20 minutes maybe
Amnesty!
Decades? Trump won in 2016.
And promptly proceeded to improves the lives of ALL Americans.
(even if the democrats refuse to admit it)
This year, Vice President Kamala Harris appears to have gotten just 52 percent of the Latin vote,
I've never seen "Latin" used like this. I wonder if it was Latinx and was changed in editing.
“Latin” makes more sense when speaking English though as English, for the most part, lacks grammatical gender. Spanish, on the other hand, has grammatical gender up the wahzoo.
That was the norm when I was growing up. "Latino" and "latina" were used for individuals and, like "he" and "her" is gender-specific. When referring to groups such as "the X community", the plural form "Latin" was used.
I don't remember when the convention shifted to "latino" but I do remember that at the time, the english gender-neutral-pronoun rule was "he". That is, "he" (and "latino") meant either known-male or gender-unknown. "She" (and "latina") were used for known-female. To this day, I don't know why anyone was bothered by that rule.
The Latin gay vote- LaTinx.
Me, I'll hope for a future where neither major party thinks of minority voters as either something to take for granted or a no-go zone.
Amen to that.
Because they won’t be here?
.
Oh you were so close when, earlier in this essay, you wrote, "Voters with college degrees have become increasingly likely to be Democrats, and those without college degrees have become increasingly likely to be Republicans." But then you had to go a fuck it up with "college-educated." The evidence for college "education" is vanishing. The correct terminology is "college-credentialed" (i.e. having a college degree).
Interesting distinction. Precisely on point.
And as someone borne of a saner version of academia, regrettably so.
Academia was never a perfect place, but what it has transformed itself into over the last 15-20 years is grotesque.
The issue is not so much that the Republicans became more multi-cultural but that the Democrats became agressively less so. Their paternalistic intolerance became too obvious to ignore. They are the party of white guilt. They have no other real platform.
I guess if we count everyone who is not a dedicated post-modern, anti-racist, nanny-state Neo-socialist as multi-cultural, then sure.
BTW, I agree. And if they keep it up, Democrats are fucked. Unless the Davos crowd just deploys troops, and then we are fucked.
It appears white supremacy is appealing to black men and latinos. Also, white women love larping as handmaidan's.
"the sort of social liberalism that is summed up by the phrase live and let live, and there is the sort summed up by a middle manager briskly strolling into a room, dropping a six-pound tome on the table, and announcing: Here are the new rules. We will email you the updates each Tuesday."
^This. Gov-Gun FORCED social liberalism is literally a contradiction of terms. There is no Liberty in 'Gun' forced social justice. Which is exactly what Democrats lobbied with. The Bill of Rights was written to LIMIT Gov-Gun use; not to grant POWER to "politically correct" the people to the Nazi-Regime's "moral standards".
The mocking comments about Sharia law might be more convincing if they weren't a day after a literal pogrom happened in the Netherlands by Muslim immigrants...
Yeah, maybe the visiting Jews were kinda jerks. But being a jerk doesn't justify mobs of people hunting down Jews.
It seems like what's going on is that people on both sides assumed that since African Americans had been mostly reliable Democrats for decades, other non-white voters would be as well. This doesn't appear to be true. Most non-white voters lean Democratic at first, but adopt the same wide distribution of political opinions as white voters as they assimilate into American society. The consistent Democratic voting record of African Americans is due to that demographic's unique history in the USA, not a trait of non-white voters in general.
Considering Republicans fought the civil war to end slavery...
Honestly it completely baffles me that they continue to support the slavery-party at up-to a 90% margin. The only reasoning I can make of it is retribution (enslave the white-man) but even then it should be focused on the slavery-party (Democrats). Maybe you can fill me in on this 'unique history' that caused this?
The wildest thing about this may be the number of Libertarians who don't seem capable of wrapping their heads around the latest triumph of the two-party system. There is nothing funnier to me than the conversations surrounding the perennial under-performing of libertarians in a society where up to 45% of the potential voters don't identify as either Republican or Democrat. Although this week was a disaster for ranked-choice voting, ranked-choice voting isn't the solution to the death-grip the dying Demopublican Duo still maintain on the election of legislative representatives in America.
Until Proportional Representation replaces the Two-Party election system, nothing will get better. NOTHING ...
We don’t need buggy whips or politics.
We have the technology to converse with and solicit democratic choices on all issues from all people online.
We don’t need politicians anymore, period.
I wrote a paper on it, technological democracy, over 40 years ago when the internet was first emerging.
Why are people so fucking stupid?
My advice to the DNC is to ignore literally everything that's been said online about this.
Instead, send an army of people to Starr County to ask the locals why they swung from voting 19% Trump in 2016 to voting 58% Trump in 2024.
Because, seriously, you need to know why, and the people online don't know.
Here’s an online survey.
https://reason.com/volokh/2024/11/06/getting-a-sense-of-voters-who-voted-biden-in-2020-but-trump-in-2024/
But we all know the real reason voters changed from Biden in 2020 to Trump in 2024 – they were injected with a special serum which turned them from advanced progressives into racist, sexist, xenophobic, deplorable clingers. To consider alternatives to this theory, we’d have to raise the possibility that these voters gained new knowledge and reflected on it, but such reflective, wiser voters could not possibly have voted for Trump, who is the new Hitler. So Occam’s Razor suggests the serum hypothesis as the likeliest scenario.
Jesse never fails to serve relevant and incisive distillations. This one shows is that collectivism--now more heavily sopped with mystical and coercive altruism--has surged. This Kleptocracy reaction is formulaic. Objectivist relevance tanked after Rand rejected Reagan's girl-bullying. This was worsened by NAMBLA Boy alienating the TIA board as the old gal croaked. Into the void moved Christian National Socialism. Dull Teutonic pedants and evangelists were exhumed to replace Heinlein and Rand. Zombie Comstockism keeps women and libertarians from upsetting the applecart with spoiler votes. Today's ideological landscape--with Dems wondering why voters are rejecting communism--matches what Jesse describes, albeit less heavy on the racial collectivism.
The "both sides" wishing is strong with this one ...
"The number of Americans interested in listening to the ramblings of an anti-trans obsessive probably isn't much larger than the number interested in listening to a lecture on how to make punctuation more inclusive. "
The difference, of course, being that in both cases the assault on normalcy is coming from one direction only.
Nobody on the right cared about trannies until the left was trying to put them in the girls' locker room.
(Some were more *prescient* about the threat than others, but that makes them "wise" and "how about that, correct", not "obsessed".)
I have long seen minority groups as more conservative than the average American. I have also seen that they were increasingly being rebuked and rejected by Republicans. I think that two things have changed. First that economics have forced minorities to look beyond the Republicans bad policies towards minorities. Second that far left's increasing voice with Democrats have turned off the naturally conservative minorities. In the end both parties need to stop looking at minority groups as hyphenated Blank-Americans and see then as simply Americans. It is worth remembering that today's majority group is heading to minority status itself.
Indeed. Republican rebuke and reject the "groups" (identify-as) politics and see every American as an Individual as the US Constitution summarizes. Democrats gang-build on race, sex, majority/minority and class/wealth status itself because their political beliefs center around [WE] mob gang & guns POWER (i.e. 'democracy').