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Elderly Americans increasingly Conservative
Voters: Blair-Rockefeller Poll shows
shifting declining support for Democrats
Newswise,
May 24, 2011--In the first Blair-Rockefeller
Poll Topic Report on findings from the poll,
Todd Shields, political scientist at the
University of Arkansas, examined the changes
in voting habits of elderly Americans. In
his analysis of the poll’s results, Shields
found evidence of the “substantial obstacles
that the Democratic Party and President
Obama, in particular, face among those
Americans 65 years and older.”
“Overall, the results of this survey
indicate that the traditional base of
support among older voters that Democrats
have relied upon since the partisan
realignment following the New Deal continues
to weaken,” Shields wrote. “While older
voters continue to vote in high percentages,
compared to younger cohorts, clear support
for the Democratic Party is confined largely
to African-Americans.”
Shields’ report, titled “Shifting Support
for Democratic Party Among American
Elderly,” was released May 23 on the website
of the Blair-Rockefeller Poll, blairrockefellerpoll.com.
Shields and political scientists Pearl Ford
Dowe, Angie Maxwell and Rafael Jimeno of the
Diane D. Blair Center of Southern Politics
and Society at the University of Arkansas
created the Blair-Rockefeller Poll.
Conducted by Knowledge Networks in November
2010, the first Blair-Rockefeller Poll
examined national and regional issues of
concern to the population of the United
States. With more than 3,400 respondents,
the poll has a national scope as well as
ample sampling of such traditionally
under-polled groups as African Americans and
Latinos. Additionally, by addressing topics
that have been little studied, the poll
allows researchers to identify
socio-cultural influences on political
values throughout the country with an
emphasis on the South. The Blair Center
partnered with the Winthrop Rockefeller
Institute to produce the Blair-Rockefeller
Poll.
“The significance of this survey is
difficult to overstate,” Shields said.
“Given the general absence of accurate data
on Southern politics as well as attitudes
and trends among minority groups, the
Blair-Rockefeller Poll is a source of
accurate information about Southern politics
and policy, as well as the political and
social attitudes of African Americans and
Latinos.”
Among elderly African Americans, 69 percent
from the South and 80 percent outside the
South reported voting for a democratic
congressional candidate. Very few reported
voting for a Republican or not voting at
all.
The results among Hispanics are mixed. A
substantial number reported not voting: 43
percent in the South and 32 percent outside
the South. Elderly Southern Hispanics were
evenly split between support for Republican
and Democratic Congressional candidates.
“To the extent to which Southern elderly
Hispanics are divided between the two
political parties, their low turnout rates
represent an opportunity, and a potential
battleground, for both political parties,”
Shields wrote.
Elderly white voters, who tend to go to the
polls, also tend to vote for the GOP, with
60 percent of Southerners and 54 percent
outside the South voting for Republican
Congressional candidates.
Additionally, older poll participants, from
the South and outside the South, disapproved
or strongly disapproved of President Obama’s
job performance when polled in November.
“With over half of those 65 and over
reporting disapproval of the way the
president is handling his job in November
2010, it will be interesting to see how
things develop over the coming year. The
Democrats could well have a difficult road
ahead of them if they hope to recapture the
presidency in 2012,” Shields said.
“Democrats will need to reach out to older
voters, try to bring younger people to the
polls, and attempt to reach out to an aging
and largely conservative America.”
The Blair Center was established in 2001 by
an act of the U.S. Congress and named in
honor of political scientist Diane Divers
Blair, who taught for 30 years in the J.
William Fulbright College of Arts and
Sciences at the University of Arkansas. The
center studies the American South from a
variety of angles to reveal the
undercurrents of politics, history and
culture that have shaped the region over
time. For more information about the Blair
Center, visit blaircenter.uark.edu or
contact director Todd Shields at tshield@uark.edu.
The University of Arkansas System
established the Winthrop Rockefeller
Institute in 2005 with a grant from the
Winthrop Rockefeller Charitable Trust. Based
on the legacy and ideas of former Arkansas
Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller, this educational
institute and conference center offers
workshops, seminars, public lectures,
conferences and special events. Program
areas include agriculture and environment,
arts and humanities, economic development,
and policy and public affairs. For more
information about the Winthrop Rockefeller
Institute, visit LiveTheLegacy.org or
contact program director Susan Dumas at sdumas@uawri.org.
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