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Republican and Democratic “trifecta” states are barreling in opposite directions at an astounding rate
If you want to understand the American political economy today, you need only look at what’s happening in the growing number of “trifecta” states — states where the same party controls the governorships and both chambers of state legislatures.
We don’t need a civil war. We’re already separating into two nations.
As Americans segregate geographically by education and political values, the number of trifectas has been increasing. Democrats now have 17 — the most they’ve had since 1994 — while Republicans have 22, about the same number they’ve had since 2011.
These Democratic and Republican trifectas are moving in opposite directions at an astounding pace —Democratic trifectas rapidly becoming more progressive and inclusive; Republican, more regressive and reactionary.
We’re splitting into two nations. But are we really?
A few weeks ago, Washington state became the 10th state in the nation to ban assault rifles and handguns. Colorado has enacted a longer waiting period for firearm sales and increased the minimum age to purchase a gun. Maryland will soon prohibit gun owners from bringing guns to schools and other sensitive locations.
Republican trifectas are moving as quickly as they can in the other direction. They’re making it next to impossible to have abortions and far easier to obtain guns. They’re banning books that discuss gender identity or sexual orientation, prohibiting gender-affirming care for young people even when parents approve, enacting prison terms for librarians whose shelves hold banned books, preventing teachers from discussing the nation’s history of racism — but allowing (if not requiring) the posting of the Ten Commandments and the teaching of religion.
They’re simultaneously making it more difficult for likely Democrats to vote — engaging in some of the most elaborate gerrymanders in the nation’s history and stripping from cities (almost all solidly Democratic) various home-rule rights. A bill in Texas even allows the state to declare elections invalid in Harris County, home to reliably Democratic Houston.
We’re splitting into two nations.
But are we really? When it comes to issues that affect people directly, it turns out that voters in Republican trifectas are not all that different from anyone else — as evidenced by their support for initiatives and referenda that preserve the right to an abortion, raise the minimum wage, expand Medicaid, and make it easier to form unions. (More than 70 percent of the public, including about half of self-declared Republicans, have favorable views of unions.)
So how have Republicans gained and kept power in the red trifectas? Suppressing Democratic votes and demagoguing culture-war issues. They’ve been telling voters that their real enemies are cultural elites, rather than economic ones; and that their problems arise from the cultural norms of the oligarchy instead of from the oligarchy’s power.
Wrong, of course. But the only way voters in these states will learn the truth is if progressives and Democrats — at both state and national levels — tell them the truth and offer them a clear alternative to the BS they’re getting from the GOP.Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
If you want to understand the American political economy today, you need only look at what’s happening in the growing number of “trifecta” states — states where the same party controls the governorships and both chambers of state legislatures.
We don’t need a civil war. We’re already separating into two nations.
As Americans segregate geographically by education and political values, the number of trifectas has been increasing. Democrats now have 17 — the most they’ve had since 1994 — while Republicans have 22, about the same number they’ve had since 2011.
These Democratic and Republican trifectas are moving in opposite directions at an astounding pace —Democratic trifectas rapidly becoming more progressive and inclusive; Republican, more regressive and reactionary.
We’re splitting into two nations. But are we really?
A few weeks ago, Washington state became the 10th state in the nation to ban assault rifles and handguns. Colorado has enacted a longer waiting period for firearm sales and increased the minimum age to purchase a gun. Maryland will soon prohibit gun owners from bringing guns to schools and other sensitive locations.
Republican trifectas are moving as quickly as they can in the other direction. They’re making it next to impossible to have abortions and far easier to obtain guns. They’re banning books that discuss gender identity or sexual orientation, prohibiting gender-affirming care for young people even when parents approve, enacting prison terms for librarians whose shelves hold banned books, preventing teachers from discussing the nation’s history of racism — but allowing (if not requiring) the posting of the Ten Commandments and the teaching of religion.
They’re simultaneously making it more difficult for likely Democrats to vote — engaging in some of the most elaborate gerrymanders in the nation’s history and stripping from cities (almost all solidly Democratic) various home-rule rights. A bill in Texas even allows the state to declare elections invalid in Harris County, home to reliably Democratic Houston.
We’re splitting into two nations.
But are we really? When it comes to issues that affect people directly, it turns out that voters in Republican trifectas are not all that different from anyone else — as evidenced by their support for initiatives and referenda that preserve the right to an abortion, raise the minimum wage, expand Medicaid, and make it easier to form unions. (More than 70 percent of the public, including about half of self-declared Republicans, have favorable views of unions.)
So how have Republicans gained and kept power in the red trifectas? Suppressing Democratic votes and demagoguing culture-war issues. They’ve been telling voters that their real enemies are cultural elites, rather than economic ones; and that their problems arise from the cultural norms of the oligarchy instead of from the oligarchy’s power.
Wrong, of course. But the only way voters in these states will learn the truth is if progressives and Democrats — at both state and national levels — tell them the truth and offer them a clear alternative to the BS they’re getting from the GOP.If you want to understand the American political economy today, you need only look at what’s happening in the growing number of “trifecta” states — states where the same party controls the governorships and both chambers of state legislatures.
We don’t need a civil war. We’re already separating into two nations.
As Americans segregate geographically by education and political values, the number of trifectas has been increasing. Democrats now have 17 — the most they’ve had since 1994 — while Republicans have 22, about the same number they’ve had since 2011.
These Democratic and Republican trifectas are moving in opposite directions at an astounding pace —Democratic trifectas rapidly becoming more progressive and inclusive; Republican, more regressive and reactionary.
We’re splitting into two nations. But are we really?
A few weeks ago, Washington state became the 10th state in the nation to ban assault rifles and handguns. Colorado has enacted a longer waiting period for firearm sales and increased the minimum age to purchase a gun. Maryland will soon prohibit gun owners from bringing guns to schools and other sensitive locations.
Republican trifectas are moving as quickly as they can in the other direction. They’re making it next to impossible to have abortions and far easier to obtain guns. They’re banning books that discuss gender identity or sexual orientation, prohibiting gender-affirming care for young people even when parents approve, enacting prison terms for librarians whose shelves hold banned books, preventing teachers from discussing the nation’s history of racism — but allowing (if not requiring) the posting of the Ten Commandments and the teaching of religion.
They’re simultaneously making it more difficult for likely Democrats to vote — engaging in some of the most elaborate gerrymanders in the nation’s history and stripping from cities (almost all solidly Democratic) various home-rule rights. A bill in Texas even allows the state to declare elections invalid in Harris County, home to reliably Democratic Houston.
We’re splitting into two nations.
But are we really? When it comes to issues that affect people directly, it turns out that voters in Republican trifectas are not all that different from anyone else — as evidenced by their support for initiatives and referenda that preserve the right to an abortion, raise the minimum wage, expand Medicaid, and make it easier to form unions. (More than 70 percent of the public, including about half of self-declared Republicans, have favorable views of unions.)
So how have Republicans gained and kept power in the red trifectas? Suppressing Democratic votes and demagoguing culture-war issues. They’ve been telling voters that their real enemies are cultural elites, rather than economic ones; and that their problems arise from the cultural norms of the oligarchy instead of from the oligarchy’s power.
Wrong, of course. But the only way voters in these states will learn the truth is if progressives and Democrats — at both state and national levels — tell them the truth and offer them a clear alternative to the BS they’re getting from the GOP.