Did Merkley Pull It Off? Hell Yes.

by: David Sirota

Sun Nov 09, 2008 at 19:30


Back in mid-October I wrote a column about Oregon Democratic Senate candidate (now Senator-elect) Jeff Merkley and why his campaign against Republican Sen. Gordon Smith was so important in forging a class-based, cross-geographic coalition between blue- and white-collar constituencies:

Smith hopes Merkley's pocket-book pitches to historically conservative areas like timber-producing Douglas County will alienate high-tech workers in suburbs like Washington County (often called "Silicon Forest"). But with Merkley surging in polls, the opposite may be happening.

The Great American Class War ravaging the industrial sector is now pillaging the information sector, too. As Intel boasts of outsourcing, HP lays off thousands and Wall Street eviscerates 401(k) plans, a new blue-collar/white-collar solidarity is emerging. That means today, as during the Great Depression, progressive economic arguments increasingly work across cultural, geographic and employment divides, tectonically realigning politics and - potentially - policy.

We know Merkley won - but did he do it by forging this new coalition? Mandate Media's Kari Chisholm   says hell yes.

David Sirota :: Did Merkley Pull It Off? Hell Yes.
Pointing me to a series of graphs he's put together, Kari emailed me today with this nugget:

In suburban high-tech Washington County, Merkley got 51% of the two-way vote.  An improvement from Smith's three previous opponents, who averaged 45% of the two-way vote.

In timber-producing Douglas County, Merkley got 37% of the two-way vote -- an improvement from Smith's three previous opponents, who averaged 31% of the two-way vote.

So, to reiterate - Merkley's win is not just a positive because it adds to the Democratic column. It is a special victory in that it shows Democrats can flip Republican formulas on their head and build a class-based economic coalition that simultaneously wins in high tech regions and increases Democratic margins in traditionally conservative blue-collar areas.


Tags: , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
So... (4.00 / 1)
will you be eventually writing a follow-up to your "Democrats' DaVinci Code" piece from 2004, using examples from 2006 and 2008?  :-)

Gotta admit, that piece was what turned me on to candidates that speak with an economically populist message.


Donate to Open Left








Friends of the Earth thanks the OpenLeft community for the ideas you generate and your contributions to the progressive movement.

As an anti-spam measure, there is a 24-hour waiting period after registering before new users can comment.
blog advertising is good for you
blog advertising is good for you
SEARCH

   

Advanced Search