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In reply to the discussion: Am I the only one sick of pundits claiming "women and blacks made the difference in Alabama?" [View all]boston bean
(36,931 posts)84. I was only making a valid point effie. You have made yours and I thought I was clear I didnt
disagree. But if that number of white women had not voted it would not even be close.
Black persons and women together brought this victory to democrats.
As a singular group black women voted in higher percentage for Doug Jones. I am extremely happy and grateful to them for their choice. They are the most loyal demographic in the party. They deserve much better policies from Democrats and if democrats are smart they will do everything they can to keep that support.
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Am I the only one sick of pundits claiming "women and blacks made the difference in Alabama?" [View all]
EffieBlack
Dec 2017
OP
I think you're on to it. Sad though. No one knows what you do in the voting booth.
brush
Dec 2017
#27
Oh yeah, it does. Years of (for lack of a better word) indoctrination will do that.
brush
Dec 2017
#61
Also sick of the myth that the majority of white women only vote that way because
lunasun
Dec 2017
#4
I haven't listened to the pundits but I saw it spun that way in print and it jumped out at me.
femmedem
Dec 2017
#5
Maybe confronting that fact (rather than running away from it) will inspire white non-voters
ecstatic
Dec 2017
#89
I've heard that - but usually in response to the broader and inaccurate assertion
EffieBlack
Dec 2017
#15
Just a small nit pik: Let's say black people. 93% of black men also voted for Jones. Not a small...
brush
Dec 2017
#33
consider those who stayed home in order not to vote for Moore...so that is not accurate.
Demsrule86
Dec 2017
#24
There were lots of things that made a difference including disgruntled Repugs casting write-in votes
eppur_se_muova
Dec 2017
#10
Well, I know that -- repsonsibility here is being taken on behalf of others by everyone involved. nt
eppur_se_muova
Dec 2017
#63
Absolutely correct. White women as a group helped Moore, just less than white men as a group did
Tom Rinaldo
Dec 2017
#16
The only stat I need people to get correct is 97% of black women in AL did not vote
Eliot Rosewater
Dec 2017
#32
It's interesting and a little troubling to see how many people here are trying to parse and spin
EffieBlack
Dec 2017
#34
I'm tired of the black male vote being given less importance in these discussions.
Stand and Fight
Dec 2017
#30
I wasn't talking about what people are posting on DU. I'm talking about what the news media/pundits
EffieBlack
Dec 2017
#42
Oh. What I saw on MSNBC gave blacks the main credit, with black WOMEN the biggest credit.
Honeycombe8
Dec 2017
#96
Black folks and the millennials... it was especially nice to see the millennials come out as many...
iluvtennis
Dec 2017
#49
I hear what you are saying. And I agree with making a distinction. But I think what they are
boston bean
Dec 2017
#62
But equating 97% with 32% because they are the two highest groups does a real disservice
EffieBlack
Dec 2017
#65
I was only making a valid point effie. You have made yours and I thought I was clear I didnt
boston bean
Dec 2017
#84
Most voters are republican in Alabama. 100% of first time democratic voters were also a big lift.
boston bean
Dec 2017
#91
So, because whites outnumber blacks, it's ok for them to vote in larger proportions for racists?
EffieBlack
Dec 2017
#72
I have seen quite the opposite. CNN and MSNBC both spent the day lauding black women.
Tipperary
Dec 2017
#74
Certainly the privileges of being white could lead some women to believe that they are
VermontKevin
Dec 2017
#81
A lot of suburban white women who voted for Republicans in the past flipped
YessirAtsaFact
Dec 2017
#83
I guess I'm not willing to jump on the "everybody gets a prize" bandwagon because
EffieBlack
Dec 2017
#93