The numbers speak.
Their message may be unfashionable, but hardly
unpalatable. They say:
GOP Future Depends on Winning Larger Share
of the White Vote.
By Steve Sailer
Readers React: Sailer v Unz
Readers React: Sailer v. Wanniski
Here at VDARE, we've discussed repeatedly http://www.vdare.com/people.htm
how dire will be the long-term impact of
immigration on the Republican Party. It's
crucial to understand, however, that the
long-term has not quite arrived. The GOP is not
yet held hostage. It still has a window of
opportunity - definitely stretching through the
next recession but maybe not to the recession
after that - to save itself by changing the
immigration laws. This can be seen by examining
the 2000 election results closely.
The reason George W. Bush struggled so much
to eke out a 271-267 win in the Electoral
College (assuming that he can hold on to it) is not
that he got crushed in the minority vote 77% to
21%. No, it's that he commanded only a measly
54% of the white vote.
To test this theory, I created a huge
state-by-state spreadsheet of election results
and Voter News Service exit poll numbers [http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2000/results/index.epolls.html]),
which allows me to play what-if games, such as:
 | What if Bush II had won 57% of the
white vote? That's hardly an
outlandish figure since Bush I
had taken 59% in 1988. If Dubya
had garnered 57% instead of just
54% of whites, he would have
cruised to an Electoral College
landslide of 367 to 171.
(Technically, I'm modeling this
by raising Bush's share of the
white vote by three points in
every state.) |
Why? Because whites remain by far the
dominant bloc in the U.S. They count for 81% of
all votes cast. Despite all of Bush's support
for diversity, illegal immigrants, bilingualism,
"affirmative access," and the like, an
overwhelming 92% of his votes came from whites.
 | What if in upping his share of the
white electorate from 54% to
57%, Dubya had alienated more
minority voters, causing his
share of the nonwhite vote to
fall by 8 points from 21% to
13%? |
A disaster, right? Wrong. Bush still would
have won 310 to 228.
 | What if in winning those three
additional white share points,
Dubya had lost every single
nonwhite vote in the USA? |
Incredibly, he still would have won.
Bush would have tied 269-269 in the Electoral
College and been elected President by the House
of Representatives.
This remarkable finding stems from the
sizable advantage the Republicans enjoy in the
Electoral College. In this case, Al Gore would
have won the popular vote by more than 3
million, but still lost the election because
Bush's strength is in small states. Since every
state, no matter how small the population, gets
three Electoral Votes for having two Senators
and a Representative, the Republican dominance
of the Great Plains and Great Basin provides a
striking advantage.
By the way, this is the flip side of the
Republican catastrophe in California. When
cultural conservatives flee California for the
interior West, the GOP picks up cheap Electoral
Votes and Senate seats in small states.
 | Now, let's turn it around. What if
instead of Bush adding three
percent of the white vote (for
which he would have gained 96
Electoral Votes), he had instead
boosted his nonwhite vote by
three points, from 21% to 24%? |
He would have picked up five more Electoral
Votes. Big deal.
 | If Bush had doubled his share
of the nonwhite vote, from 21%
to 42% and somehow avoided
losing any white votes, he still
would have gained only 52
Electoral Votes. |
So where could Bush have picked up an
additional 3 percent of the white vote? The most
obvious source: white union families. The 26% of
the electorate with a union member in their
households voted 59% to 37% for Gore. For the
time being, most union families are still white.
So if Bush could have won enough white labor
families to raise his total labor vote from 37%
to about 46%, that would have done the trick of
lifting his share of the white vote from 54% to
57%.
What could persuade more white union families
to vote Republican when the current AFL-CIO
leadership is so leftist? Here's a suggestion.
The labor bosses are selling out their old
time members' interests in order to try to pad
their membership with immigrants, legal and
illegal. That's why the AFL-CIO supremos
recently called for another amnesty for illegal
immigrants. [http://www.vdare.com/afl-cio.htm]
Immigration should be the perfect issue for the
GOP to use to split the rank and file from their
Democratic bosses.
Since union efforts cost Bush Michigan,
Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin (at a minimum),
you'd think that the GOP would be hot to win
back the Reagan Democrats.
Don't count on it, though. It's just so much
more fashionable to continue to chase futilely
after Hispanics.
In summary: the GOP could win more elections
by raising its fraction of the white vote
minimally than by somehow grabbing vastly higher
fractions of the minority vote.
I said "could."
Note: This model is based on election results
as of 11/15/2000 and the VNS exit polls, as
reported on the CNN website. I also made minor
objective statistical adjustments to account for
the slight disagreements between the actual
results and the exit polls. So, while your
mileage may vary, this model looks quite robust.
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
November 28, 2000 |