| Pastor's
Page By Fr. George Welzbacher November 16, 2008 Though Election Day has come and gone, three senatorial contests remain unresolved-in Minnesota, to be sure, and in Alaska and Georgia. But by now the statisticians have had sufficient time to interpret the election's overall results. In "The Week in Review" section of last Sunday's New York Times (November 9, 2008), an interesting analysis appeared decked out with graphs based on exit polls (and there fore subject to question), the Times report indicated that across the nation as a whole American men divided their votes almost evenly between Senator Obama and Senator McCain, with the data giving Mr. Obama a very slight edge of one percent (49 to 48), while American women went h eavily for Mr. Obama, supporting him with a wide majority of 56 percent vs. the 43 percent of that vote that went to Mr. McCain. Account, however, must be taken of family status to get a clearer picture of how America's women voted: married Americans, husbands and wives, trended towards Senator McCain, with more than half of their vote (52%) cast in his favor as against 47 percent in the Obama column. By way of contrast unmarried voters, both men and women, gave nearly two thirds of their votes (65 percent) to Obama, with only 33 percent to McCain. For America's racial and ethnic minorities racial identity was an excellent predictor of how their votes would go, with 95 percent of Blacks voting for Senator Obama -an outcome for which even the most ardent McCain loyalists will display, I am sure, a measure of sympathetic understanding-while Hispanic voters, who in 2004 gave President George W. Bush 44 percent of their vote, supported Senator Obama in 2008 by more than two thirds (67 percent vs. 31 percent for McCain). The over heated rhetoric employed by certain talk-show hosts vis-a- vis immigration issues was probably an important, perhaps a decisive factor here. Among America's less sizable racial minorities nearly two thirds of Americans of Asian derivation gave their vote to Senator Obama (62 percent to 35). Senator McCain, however, won the overall backing of White voters by 55 to 43 percent, though with the significant reservation that White voters under 30 years of age went "big time" for Senator Obama. Ethnic background produced variations in the Catholic vote. While Hispanic Catholics went heavily for Obama, America's Catholics voted as a whole 54 to 45 percent for McCain. [The British publication The Economist (Nov. 8) credits Obama with drawing 54% of the Catholic vote]. Jewish voter stayed true to their long-standing political allegiance, giving Democratic Senator Obama a whopping 78 percent of their support vs. 21 percent for Senator McCain. But Mr. McCain scored a major victory with White Protestants, chalking up 65 percent of their votes vs. 34 percent for Mr. Obama. Perhaps most surprising of all was the finding that a majority of America's wealthiest citizens-those with an annual income of more than $200,000- voted for Senator Obama, despite his announced plan to target their group for heavier taxation. (For anecdotal confirmation of that surprising fact just take a drive sometime soon along St. Paul's Summit Avenue or the Mississippi River Boulevard with their adjoining side streets, before the Obama-Biden lawn signs start coming down). The heart hath its reasons of which the mind would know naught.
Assembling an impressive coalition of Blacks, Hispanics,
Jews, voters across the board under the age of thirty, a majority of
the unmarried and a majority of the wealthy, with a staggering
advantage in funding and with heavy support from the media, Senator
Obama focused his message on two simple ideas- hope and change- and
with his eloquence and calm inspired legions of volunteers to get out
the vote. Even those who are appalled at his anti-life zealotry will
concede that he ran a brilliant campaign. And should the radical shift
in the vote in once solidly Republican Oakland County, Michigan to
p redominantly Democratic in the recent election be taken as a portent
for the future? In the New York Times
for November 11th Stanley Greenberg offered this assessment. *
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Democrats By: Stanley B. Greenberg The New York Times Op-Ed Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Oakland County has formed part of the Republican
heartland in Michigan and in the country From 1972 to 1988,
Democratic presidential candidates in their best years lost the county
by 20 points. From Bill Clinton to John Kerry, however, Democrats
began to settle for a draw. Over the past two decades, Oakland
County began to change, as an in flux of teachers, lawyers, and
high-tech professionals began to out number the county's business owners
and managers....almost a quarter of Oakland's residents are members of
various racial minorities. *
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Accompanying-the charts in last Sunday's Times was a
summary written by Marjorie Connelly. lay I share it with ycu here. *
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Dissecting
the Changing Electorate By Marjorie Connelly From: The New York Times Sunday, November 9. 2008 One way to consider Barack Obarna's success last Tuesday
is to consider John McCain's failure. By virtually every electoral
measure-including age, sex, race, religion - Mr. McCain lost ground won
by George W. Bush four years ago. *
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