honorentheos wrote:There's no argument that part of the analysis and argument in the OP is based on voter districts that, were that the only focus, would be deceptive. The WSJ article behind the Breitbart article takes on multiple facets of the shift.
There isn't a shift of "the wealthy" to Democrats. What there is a shift among is professional, educated classes to Democrats that are offset by working class voters shifting towards Republicans. The shift among the working class is almost entirely located in whites, and even more specifically, older whites.
This is an interesting story to follow and learn about, but it's not the story that Brietbart wants to tell you. Briebart instead wants to reinforce the popular argument in the alt-right that Republicans are "the worker's party" now whereas Democrats are the party of rich elitists. It's right there in the the title Ajax adopts for the thread title. In doing so, it provides data that is misleading in support of that thesis. For that argument, it's notable that working class people actually support Democrats by a substantial margin. Maybe in the world of Brietbart minorities don't count, but they do when understanding voting behavior of Americans. It's even more notable that the rich, in fact, support Republicans in overwhelmingly high numbers. They only have a few votes, so it doesn't matter a lot for elections in those terms, but the wealthy also overwhelmingly prefer to direct their donations towards the Republican party and allied groups. That does matter for elections.
Yes, dentists are increasingly likely to vote Democrat. Yes, the most economically successful areas of the country are liberal and increasingly so. That doesn't tell you what the owners of the bulk of capital in the US prefer. Those people in the really big houses in those wealthy cities? On average, they still like the Republican party by a lot.