Townhall...
Americans
Vote Conservative: With
Their Moving Vans
By Michael Medved
8/31/2011
Conservatives
yearn for a big,
clarifying electoral victory in November of 2012, but they’re already
winning
decisively whenever Americans vote with their feet--or their moving
vans.
New
Census numbers show citizens
fleeing by the millions from liberal states and flocking in comparable
numbers
to bastions of rightwing sentiment. Call it the Great Political
Migration.
Between
2009 and 2010 the five biggest
losers in terms of “residents lost to other states” were all prominent
redoubts
of progressivism: California, New York, Illinois, Michigan and New
Jersey.
Meanwhile, the five biggest winners in the relocation sweepstakes are
all
commonly identified as “red states” in which Republicans generally
dominate
local politics: Florida, Texas, North Carolina, Arizona and Georgia.
Expanding
the review to a 10-year span, the biggest population gainers (in
percentage
terms) have been even more conservative than last year’s winners:
Nevada,
Arizona, Utah, Idaho and Texas, in that order.
The
shift in national demographics has
already rearranged the playing field for the upcoming presidential
election.
States that Barack Obama carried were the biggest losers in the
reapportionment
that followed the 2010 Census, with New York and Ohio dropping two
electoral
votes each. Texas, meanwhile, gained a whopping four votes all by its
Lone Star
lonesome self. Even in the unlikely event that Obama carried exactly
the same
states he carried in 2008, he’d still win six fewer electoral votes in
2012.
Even more tellingly, if the epic Bush-Gore battle of 2000 played out on
the new
Electoral College map, with the two candidates carrying precisely the
states
they each won 11 years ago, the result would have been a far more
clear-cut GOP
victory margin of 33 electoral votes (instead of the five-vote
nail-biter
recorded in history books).
Fifty
years ago, the United States saw
a mass migration from East to West. Today we’re witnessing a comparable
migration from left to right.
This
significant shift in population
not only presents progressives with significant problems in terms of
practical
politics, but also confronts them with profound ideological challenges.
If
liberal approaches work so well,
why are so many people choosing to pack their bags and desert some of
the most
progressive, pro-labor, big-government states in the union?
And
if uncompromising conservatism is
a cruel, fraudulent disaster, why do small government, pro-business,
low tax,
gun-toting and church-going states draw such a disproportionate number
of
America’s internal immigrants?
In
the emerging presidential campaign,
it’s easy to see a version of these questions dominating the debate.
Why should
anyone choose to endorse liberal, Democratic policies when a single
year
(2009-10) saw 880,000 residents packing up their belongings to place
Barack
Obama’s Illinois in their rear-view mirror, while 782,000 new arrivals
helped
drive the robust economy in Rick Perry’s Texas?
During
the bad-old-days of the Cold
War so many people tried to leave East Germany that the Communists
built a wall
to keep them in. The world rightly took that gesture as evidence of
failure and
corruption in the Stalinist system.
California
can’t raise a wall to
prevent people from abandoning the Not-So-Golden State, or somehow
deter or
return the 2,000,000 who decamped between 2009 and 2010. Doesn’t this
overwhelming outflow of residents count as powerful evidence of the
failure,
corruption and bankruptcy of the state’s leadership –long-dominated by
legislative leftists, even under the moderate GOP governorship of
Arnold
Schwarzenegger? For the first time since statehood in 1850, a new
Census
brought no increase in California’s representation in Congress (or the
Electoral College).
California
has become a sad symbol of
dysfunctional government at its shabbiest, shadiest, most sclerotic and
irresponsible—an exquisitely painful irony for those of us who recall
the
Golden State’s onetime position in the national imagination. Not so
long ago,
the whole nation (or at least its most enterprising and adventurous
elements)
seemed to envy the state and to embrace the notion of “California
Dreamin’.”
My
late parents cherished that dream
and made the trek from Philadelphia to my dad’s first job (after
graduate
school on the GI Bill) in San Diego. They loaded a battered, gray ’53
Plymouth
with their possessions and their five-year-old son (me) and drove
across the
country for a thrilling new life. Growing up in the ’50’s and ’60’s,
nearly
everyone we knew seemed recently arrived from somewhere else, thrilled
to
experience the electric atmosphere of a place that seemed to define
America’s
bright future.
After
my parents’ divorce, my father
eventually decided to leave California for a corner of the earth that
promised
even more excitement and significance—Israel – and he spent the last 19
years
of his life in Jerusalem. As for me, I finally persuaded my wife Diane
(a
fifth-generation Californian whose ancestors arrived in Gold Rush days)
to move
our family to Washington State in 1996, and there’s never been a day
when I
regretted that decision.
To
some, this move from one center for
liberal lunacy to another progressive outpost made no sense: Seattle
offered the
lefty politics as California, with considerably less sunshine. But
there is one
striking difference between these two Pacific Coast states: when it
comes to
state income taxes, California’s top rate recently crested to an
appalling 10.3
percent (on top of federal tax burdens, sales tax, property tax, and
much
more). Washington, on the other hand, imposes no income tax at all, and
ongoing
growth makes Washington the only blue state (that’s right, the only
one) that
added a congressional seat in the recent Census.
The
impact of state income taxes helps
explain the flow of business and families to those states with more
hospitable,
less intrusive attitudes toward enterprise. The dollars involved are
hardly
trivial. California punishes the stinking, selfish, filthy rich by
imposing the
second highest rate–9.3 percent—on every dollar an individual earns
beyond the
obscenely lavish sum of $46,766. New York takes similar aim at
privileged
plutocrats, with individual tax rates of at least 6.75 percent for any
earnings
above …$20,000. But if those hard-pressed wage-earners make their way
to
Nevada, they’ll pay nothing in state income tax, and revel in their
residence
in one of nine states that avoid punishing earning and effort. Even in
left-tilting Washington, voters in 2010 rejected (by nearly two-to-one)
a state
income tax placed on the ballot by Bill Gates Sr.
There
are no real political refugees
within the United States, and few families move from one state to
another to
search for more congenial political leadership. Climate, family
concerns and
job opportunities are all factors. But the contrasting cultures that
state
politics help to shape make a big difference in determining which parts
of the
nation seem more or less promising to potential migrants. With the
Gallup Poll
showing self-described “conservatives” outnumbering self-proclaimed
“liberals”
by nearly 2 to 1 (41 percent to 21 percent) it’s not surprising that
states
with pro-business, pro-family attitudes draw disproportionate numbers
of new
arrivals. At the same time, it makes sense that those states with
aggressive,
intrusive bureaucracies, high taxes and relentless experiments in
multiculturalism will encourage mass departures.
The
millions of re-settlers who move
their families to more sympathetic venues surely feel motivated by
personal
considerations more than ideology, but they still play a role in
reshaping the
nation’s political future. For generations, conservatives tried to
convince
doubters that their ideas were right in some ultimate, philosophical
sense.
Now, with countless frustrated families making fresh starts in
right-leaning
states, they’ve obviously made the case that in the real world, it’s
the
conservative approach that works.
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it at Townhall
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