Kepler
Si certus es dubita
Re: Campaign 2016 - It's never too late to start all over again!
Though there's some meh math there let's assume the GOP loses about 400k more voters than the Democrats in 4 years simply due to having more older voters. The total vote in the last election was 125M. That means this effect is less than 1% of the popular vote, about 0.3% last time. If it builds over many elections it becomes a larger and larger problem, but for any given cycle it's decimal dust.
We saw the same effect when New Deal Democrats started dying off in the 70s and 80s. Up until that time, the Democrats had actually held an advantage among older voters due to the hangover effect of FDR's popularity. We're seeing that now with the aging of the Reagan coalition. (By the next election a person will have to be at least 50 to have ever cast a vote for Reagan. About 44% of the US electorate is over 50 (95 / 215M), meaning a large majority of American voters have no adult recollection of a Republican president not named "Bush.")
Paradoxically, I think the effect will become smaller because of GOP policies. As Paul Ryan et al introduce bills aimed at privatizing social security, older voters will become more nervous about the GOP and Republican loyalty among the olds will soften. The GOP was betting on younger voters cutting payments for a system they tried to convince them would never be around for them, but that doesn't seem to have worked. (For one thing, social security's solvency is fine. For another, the GOP had what is usually the Dems' problem: the message they were trying to put over was too complicated for the typical voter.)
tl; dr: If I were a Republican, I'd worry a lot more about my party's association with racist and misogynist themes than aging out. The world will always produce roughly as many conservatives as liberals. The question is will the GOP be perceived as a modern conservative party or as an atavistic reactionary menace. The GOP needs its David Cameron.
Fascinating article:
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/05/the-gop-is-dying-off-literally-118035.html?ml=po
Another unreported but unfortunately too real scenario is people who can no longer get to the polls due to various ailments.
Though there's some meh math there let's assume the GOP loses about 400k more voters than the Democrats in 4 years simply due to having more older voters. The total vote in the last election was 125M. That means this effect is less than 1% of the popular vote, about 0.3% last time. If it builds over many elections it becomes a larger and larger problem, but for any given cycle it's decimal dust.
We saw the same effect when New Deal Democrats started dying off in the 70s and 80s. Up until that time, the Democrats had actually held an advantage among older voters due to the hangover effect of FDR's popularity. We're seeing that now with the aging of the Reagan coalition. (By the next election a person will have to be at least 50 to have ever cast a vote for Reagan. About 44% of the US electorate is over 50 (95 / 215M), meaning a large majority of American voters have no adult recollection of a Republican president not named "Bush.")
Paradoxically, I think the effect will become smaller because of GOP policies. As Paul Ryan et al introduce bills aimed at privatizing social security, older voters will become more nervous about the GOP and Republican loyalty among the olds will soften. The GOP was betting on younger voters cutting payments for a system they tried to convince them would never be around for them, but that doesn't seem to have worked. (For one thing, social security's solvency is fine. For another, the GOP had what is usually the Dems' problem: the message they were trying to put over was too complicated for the typical voter.)
tl; dr: If I were a Republican, I'd worry a lot more about my party's association with racist and misogynist themes than aging out. The world will always produce roughly as many conservatives as liberals. The question is will the GOP be perceived as a modern conservative party or as an atavistic reactionary menace. The GOP needs its David Cameron.
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